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No. 214—118lh Year
VICTORIA, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 1976
** 15c Daily, 30c Sunday
South African ‘despair’
i
Tribal leaders
demand talks
JOHANNKSBURG (AP>
Moderate black tribal leaders
Saturday demanded a meet¬
ing with Prime Minister John
Vorster to find soKitions to
grievances that have led to
riots in black urban areas.
Leader» from seven of
South Africa’s nine tribal
homelands met for eight
hours at a Johannesburg air¬
port hotel, one of the few in¬
tegrated hotels in the country.
Only the Transkei homeland
and the Swazi reserve, newest
and smallest of the tribal
areas, were not r^resented
at the meeting.
Suspects sought
in school blaze
By RAY KLRR v
lilMS Idltor
CAMPBEU. RIVER — A $3
million fire which destroyed
Campbell River Junior high
school early Saturday morn¬
ing was almo.st certainly the
work of arsonists.
Campbell River RCMP said
Saturday they had three sus¬
pects they were trying to
track down, although no one
was in custody.
RCMP said the intruder
alarm was tripped about 10:30
p.m. Friday, with a series of
small fires believed set simul¬
taneously around the building.
Two cruisers were dis¬
patched to the school and the
main fire was first discovered
in the gymnasium.
Only an adjoining library
and workshop were left stand¬
ing after the local fire depart¬
ment. a contingent from Onir-
lenay and B.C. Forest Service
personnel had fought the
blaze ah night.
There were no Injuries re-'
ported and the school, built in
1951. was insured for $3.1 miP
lion.
According to Campbell
River school board officials,
970 pupils were expected In a
little iiiore than two weeks to
enrol at the junior high.
Early indications were they
would be distributed through
Campbell River senior hiji^
senior high school and other
elementary schools.
Howev'cr, more definite ar¬
rangements will probably be
made at a school board emer¬
gency meeting to be held
early this week.
r The destroyed complex was
the major junior high school
In the area. The only other
Junior high is at Willow Point.
B.C. protest
growing
^effectively^
By DON C01XIN8
CsisnUt Rseortsr
**What the federal governmeot and tta Antt-iaflatloo
Board are doing by ripping up hmidreda of contracts
bargained In good talth by emi^yeea aod emi^oyers is
terribly destructive to the fibre at democAcy/* ^
(Eynn WlUlatns, Canadian leader of the United St^l-
workers of America).
That was eariier last week. By Friday Canadian
Labor Congress secretary Donald btoitgonnery was
leaving the philosophical views to people like Williams
and was zeroing in on specific “injusiticee" with a ven¬
geance.
“This bizarre and unprincipled act makes nonsense
of the government's pretensions that the decisions
under the wage control progr a m will bear any rela¬
tionship .to principles of fairness and justice.”
The object of Montgomery’s attack was federal an¬
ti-inflation program adminietratnr Donald Taneley who
ordered a dramatic rollback to two sets of wage in¬
creases already reduced by the Anti-Inflatkin Board it¬
self.
Tansley cut the increases frf two groups of New¬
foundland mechanics and auto body men to eight per
cent from the 19.6 and 25.5 per cent levels recommend¬
ed by the AIR
To Montgomery it was an “act ot unparaJlelled vin¬
dictiveness’' which simply showed that ^ government
would do anything “to frustrate and destroy the process
of free collective bargaining in this country."
Similar outcries are being heard in B.C these days
as organized labor acroas the country kxto for some
imtformlty in the might it hopes to bring to bear on the
federal government in less than two ni4mth8.
It is a matter of rallying the titnpa for labor's big
day — the National Day of Protest it has scheduled tor
Oct. 14. the first anniversary of the wage and price con¬
trol program.
“I think It Is devrioping pretty effectively, particu-
lariy In British Columbia." B.C. Federation of Labor
secretary Len Cfuy told the Colonist
To ensure that the day of protest is well orchestrat¬
ed (there is careful avoidant of the term “general
strike”) labor is already getting its acta together
across the country.
The B.C. federation has announced plans for a
special meeting Aug. 30 that would bring under one roof
all the staff representatives and officers of the unions
within the fedei aUon fold.
The idea is to “finalize plans” for what the federa¬
tion labels the “Oc-I. 14 work stoppage."
(V>ntiDued OH Page t
A strongly-worded state¬
ment issued after the meeting
rejected the white-minority
government’s policy of
apartheid and demanded the
release of scores of detained
black nationalists.
The group also rejected the
government’s contention that
black power Ideology Import¬
ed from the United States was
the cause of recent distur¬
bances in South Africa.
“We meet together In re¬
sponse to the continuing cry
ot deep frustration and de-,
spair of our people throughout
the republic which has man¬
ifested itself since June 16."
Hudson Ntsanwisi, chief min¬
ister of the Gazankulu tribal
homeland, said.
June 16 was when riots
broke out in the biacks-only
township of Soweto near Jo¬
hannesburg. Official casualty
lists show at least 252 persons,
ail but three of them blacks,
have died aince the riots
began and spread to black
towns around South Africa’s
ma.k>r cities.
The initial grievance was
the enforced use of the Dutch-
based Afrikaans language in
schools. Later demonstrations
have attacked other .symbols
of white dominance In South
Africa where four mlUinn
whites exert control over 18
millicm blacks.
The government has backed
down on the Afrikaans rule,
saying students may choose
between Afrikaans or English.
Blacks consider Afrikaans a
symbol of white rule and also
argue that English Is more
practical.
Disturbances were reported
Saturday near Cape Town.
Port Elizabeth and Alice. In
one incident, a group of 20
blacks beat a white man and
wrecked his car at 3 a.m. on
a road outside Johannesburg.
Police Minister James
Kruger has said that commu¬
nist ideology, which sparked
disorders in the early 1960s.
was being replaced by black
power ideok^ imported from
the United States.
“It is more romantic — a
sort of black Nazism.”
Kruger said.
He seld the disorders were
ending, at least partly be¬
cause many black nationalist
leaders have been jailed
under laws that allow ^defi¬
nite detention without trial.
Chief Catsha Buthelezi.
leader of the country’s four
million Zulus, said: “The
unrest wouldn’t have gone to
such lengths if the soil wasn't
fertile in the first place.”
Meanwhile, the black tribal
leaders demanded that the
Bantu (African) adminfstra-
tion boards that administer
the townships be acrapped.
They also repeat^ that
they “have no intention what¬
soever of opting for so-called
‘independence’ as we do not
w'ant to abdicate our birth¬
right as South Africans, as
well as forfeiting our share
of the economy and wealth
which we have jointly built."
L'nder new government poli¬
cy, the nine tribal homelands
or Bantustans. comprising 1.3
per cent of the country's land
area, are to become indepen¬
dent. All blacks are to be citi¬
zens ot the homelands rather
than South Africa.
Wliat’s up, doc?
There are all sorts of strange looking two-legged
animals which wander around zoos, often pointing
square things into one’s face. Curiosity got the
better of this giraffe at African Lion Safari Park
at Rockton, Ont., who decided to get better look at
one of the boxes held by biped visitor. Distortion
effect is produced by use of wide-angle lens.
Red tape delays Lo ndon^s saving plan
Water down the U.K. drain
LONDON (UPl) - British
red tape Saturday held up
London's water saving plans,
dooming ^ million gallons to
go dowTi the drain every day.
Officials locked the gates of
public forests in seven
glish counties in hopes of halt¬
ing a rash of (ires triggered
by Britain's worst drought in
250 years.
Welsh water authorities cir¬
culated bright red posters
warning. “It's running out."
and prepared to shut off
water to 1 million people’s
Iwwnee for 17 houns in every
24.
Forestry commission orders
closing forests and woodlands
in the hardest hit areas did
not come soon enough for
some exhausted fire depart¬
ments.
“We are stretched to the
limit,” said Ray Orringe. a
fire officer in South Wales.
“We are fighting a war with¬
out wartime organization.
“In normal times we gel 10
to 20 calls a day. In the past
few weeks we have been get¬
ting up to 110 a day.
"Some part-time fir
have not slept for 48
because they go straig^from
their usual jobs to nghting
fires. One man hasn’t slept in
72 hours."
Belgian authorities Satur¬
day began enforcing regula¬
tions which could toss a man
into jail for washing his car.
An emergency decree Im¬
poses fines of up to $1 million
and jail terms up to five
years for wasting water. The
minimum fine is $100 and the
minimum jail term one
month.
Only one British area so far
imposes fines for illegal water
use. though all nine water dis¬
tricts have applied for that
authority. The Thames area
application, covering Greater
London, stalled on red tape.
Crowd
cheers
blood y
girl
HARTFORD. Conn. fUPI)
- A 16-ye»rK>ld girl, aiv
parently high on LSD, slashed
her wrists and arms and then
rushed to the steps a
Roman Catholic church pok¬
ing a razor to her throat while
a crowd of 300 persons
cheered and screamed, “do
your thing, sister!”
“Anything that she did that
looked like it was going to
draw blood, they cheered,"
said police detective William
Tremont.
The girl, not identified be¬
cause she is a minor, was hit
by a whisky bottle during
the 45 minutes she held back
police, priests and friends by
threatening to cut her throat.
She finally collapsed on ^
steps of Immaculate Concep¬
tion church because she lost
so much blood. She was treat¬
ed at a Hartford hospital and
released.
Police called the crowd's
cheering “disgusting."
“The guys {police at the
scene) told me they were just
like animals.” Tremont said.
‘They were yelling, ‘do it.
sister!' ‘Do yom' tiling, sister!’
"right on!' “ the officers told
the detective.
“It was like they were
witnessing a spectacle at a
football game," Tremont said.
Friends of the girt told re¬
porters she had taken LSD.
CooUaued oa Page i
Inside
Cargo blocks
firefighers
—Page 3
Bennett explains
B.C's position
—Page 6
Speed up work
MPs asked
—Page 9
Banks fighting
daily-interest bill
—Page 12
Pressure hurting
Victoria shows
—Record Week, 36
Its public notices eight days
ago of pending restrictions
failed to comply with some
provisions of the emergency
law passed by parliament last
nuxith. With 40 million gallons
a day piourihg down the drain
until the restrictions come
into force, authorities said it
would take until September to
unsnarl the mess.
In France, parched like
England by a summer-kxig
drought, a forest fire trapped
hundreds of vacationers on a
seaside beach near Royan.
With the fire cutting coastal
roads, a Dunkirk-like armada
of small boats rescued the ¥»>
cationers from the beach.
BackKTouad
Pate
8
Bri4|i«
»
Tlie Bwtrher
Checkmate
S8
ClaMifled
87‘56
Collectible*
60
CmhIcs
?4
CroMW'ord
40
EditorlaU
4
Entertainment
Family $7-30.
K. AS
Finance
1M4
Namee In the Newa ,
ft
OutdOOFN
97
8Um Gourmet
m
SporU 16
. 18-62
Stamp Packet
28
Televlalon
38
Travel
34. S5
Week In Recnrda
38
Trooper’s had enough of police life
BALTIMORE (UPI) — A veteran cop is being
put out to pasture early. The noise of the traffic,
especially trucks, is too tough on his nerves. And
he needs someone to take care of him.
Trooper, a 12-year-old black gelding, was
taken off the streets after four years of working as
Officer Charles Esler’s partner. Now he’s waiting
for new "parents” to claim him.
■’The vet recommended we get him away from
trucks and traffic,’’ said Sgt. Thomas Whalen, who
has watched over 18 four-legged cops for 32 yeai's.
"He’s too nervous to take into traffic.
’’Maybe he just finally figured ’this isn’t for me’
and was ready to retire,” Whalen said, walking by
the stalls, calling each horse by name.
”It could be another coujrie of years befbre we
retire another hoi'se,” Whalen saiA-v^t ju^t doesn’t
happen all the time. But you know that one day
you will have to retire them. Everyone has to retire
sometime — that’s life.
"There’s a lot of sentiment when a horse w
retired but we know he’ll have a good hbme,” he
■said.
"He’s a nice horse,”. Whalen said, adding
Trooper will be a ’’good family horse; He’ll make a
good trail hoi-se for somebody who will treat him
right.”
Trooper’s new owners will be interviewed and
before he leaves the police department his new
home will be checked. Whalen is proud of his
horses, which are carefully selected, then their
adjustment to police work is judged during a 30-day
probation period.
”He was just perfect when he went through it.”
Whalen said of Trooper, a saddle horse who was
purchased from a Baltimore County resident. ”He
did just swell.
”We look for stock saddle horses,” he said.
"There are no thoroughbreds here. TTjey’re just too
nei-vous. We also only get geldings and look for bays
or chestnuts — you know, so they look uniform.”
Trooper was the only black gelding. He has a
blaze face and white socks on his back feet.
For Esier, after saddling Trooper for four years,
there will be adjustments.
"Each officer has his own mount,” Whalen said.
’’They get used to the horse and know their habits.
The horse is their partner.”
Sail)* Colanitt Vlctona, B.C., Sunday, Aujuat 23, 1976
Alaskan
cities
^iviggle^
Belfast women stage
massive peace march
c*i»nitt Ntwt s«rvic* The women's peace move- alert their neighbors
B.C. protest growing
The big B.C planning ses¬
sion achialty grows out of
meetings held last week in Ot¬
tawa to get the forres marrh-
ing in step on a naticmal level.
Guy. like labor leaders
acrosa the country, is talking
optimistically erf the show of
strength he beeves labor will
demonstrate.
It is a means of countering
critics (some erf them in the
Fnnii Caar I
labor movement) who say the
»'age control protest is a
waste of time and that it
wpn’t cause nearly the ejcpect-
ed number of workers to
leave the job.
It la for this reason — fear
of embarrassment through
failure in reeponse—that gen¬
eral strikes have been avoid-
ced In Canada.
But this time labor, bol¬
stered by the manifesto It laid
on the government last May.
is determined to go all the
way and take its chances.
Men like Guy choose not to
talk of some o< the w'aming
signs — rejection of the dem¬
onstration by the second
Woman crughed in U.S. hospital
Canadian agency sued
BOSTON (AP) — Heirs of a
Brockton. Ma.ss.. woman
crushed to death by a cancer
therapy machine at Tufts
New Kngland Medical Centre
have filed a J2.4 million dam-
Crowd cheers
i'roiii Vdp’
Police aaid she appeared to
be drugged.
Three bottles were thro\%Ti
by the crowd which booted as
the girl staggered on the
church steps. One bottle
struck the girl and the others
smashed against the church
and the street curb.
While the girl bled profuse¬
ly, one man jumped up on the
sidewalk and recited a brief
couplet frf do^erel verse, a
witness said.
*T have never seen so much
blood.*’ said Rev. Joseph De-
vine. a priest at Immaculate
Conception.
"It looked like there was as
tnuch as if you dropped a half
gallon bottle of tomato juice
— that's how thick it was."
the priest said.
Police Officer James Quig¬
ley said he saw the girl slash¬
ing her forearms and wrwts
alwut 10:30 p.m. at a city in-
fersertion. He approached her
and she ran a block to the
steps of the church as police.
priesU and friends tried to
lalk her into dropping the
razor she held to her (hixwt,
police said.
She ignored them and rut
her forearms three moi*e
times as the gathering crowd
applauded.
The crowd cheered when
the girl finally fainted and
collapsed from loss of blood
from her cuts. Police took her
to hospital.
A dozen persons went to
look at the pools at blood that
had dripped from the giri’s
arms after she was taken
away.
"What has society come
to?" said a policeman. "I
can't believe this."
.IVz-ycar probe
led to arrests
MONTREAL (CP) — Two
businessmen and a lawyer
have been charged with 38
counts of exporting arid traf¬
ficking in (HKaine. heroin and
opium. lawyer Denis Pont-
hriand. 31. and businesamen
Joseph Zunenshine, 38, and
Dima Messina. 37. pleaded
not guilty and chose trial by
jury. Th^ were arrested af¬
ter a 3 ’ 3 -year investigation
by the RCMP and the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Agency.
age suit against Atomic En¬
ergy of Canada. Ltd. and a
United States firm.
C. Hilda MacKenzie, 65. wi¬
dowed mother of eij^t. was
killed in March. 1974. The hos¬
pital said at the time that her
chest was crushed when a
stretcher she was on did not
stop lifting her toward the
ther^V maichine.
The suit was filed in U.S.
District Court against Atomic
Energy, maker of the ma¬
chine and stretcher, and AMF
Inc., of New Jersey, distribu-*
tor in the U.S.
Phyllis Gravelle, a daughter
and administrator of Mrs.
MacKenzie’s estate, brought
the action.
The suit said the radiation
machine was "negligently de¬
signed. developed, tested,
manufactured ... sold and
distributed" and the compa¬
nies did not adequately in¬
struct physicians in its safe
and proper operation.
The plaintiffs said the suit
is to recover "for the cons¬
cious pain and suffering" <rf
their mother and for the bene¬
fit of her estate.
Federal grant
aids UBC
OTTAWA (CP) — The fed¬
eral health department will
provide a $1.4 millk^i grant to
the University of British Co
lumbia health services centre,
it was announced. The grant
will be used to cover costs of
providing additional health
teaching and research facili¬
ties in the centre's extended
care unit. B.C. Is contributing
$9.8 million to the project.
Alaska aids
fish hatchery
JUNEAU, Alaska (AIP) —
Ibe state has approv e d a
SGOO.OOO salmon hatchery loan
for the Prince William Sound
Aquaculture Corp. at Cbr-
do^, says Tony Motley, stale
commissioner of commerce
and economic development.
The loan is the first approved
under the hatchery kian pro¬
gram whkh went into effect
June 19. Tlte Cordova cor¬
poration plans to begin with a
hatcheiy capable of producing
20 million pirrfe salmon fiy.
biggest union in the fJjC. the
177.000-member Public Ser¬
vice Alliance (rf Canada, un¬
certainty of some other unions
and the growing threat <rf em¬
ployers to take action against
paiiiclpants.
A numbar of union leaders
have rtfid their members
aren't being frightened off by
such talk. The members
themselves will have to pro¬
vide the final answ'er In Oc¬
tober during demonstrations
that will apparently range
from parades to rallies.
In the meantime, Guy and
other B.C. federation officers
say they are confident support
in this province will be among
the strongest in the nation —
that a sizable number of the
more than 230.000 wurioers
covered by the federation will
heed the call.
The province’s biggest indi¬
vidual union. the 4.5,000
member International Wood-
woricers of America, will of¬
ficially announce this week
that its people are solidly be¬
hind the pnrfett.
That is good news for the
federation. But there are still
some question marics. While
Guy expects the tame supfwrt
from the second biggest union
— the .35.000-membcr B.C.
Government Employees'
Uniem — the answer may
have to wait until the execu¬
tive meets in September.
One BOGEU source Mid
last week there were some
signs of conflicting opinion
within the'union, like the fed¬
eral public employees in the
PSAC, there may be some
fear of government reprisal.
Beyond this is the growing
doubt that the Teamsters — a
big union outside the federa¬
tion wni join the show.
But the might of the federa¬
tion would be enough to make
the right Impression, accord¬
ing to Guy and other officers.
"We will be having a jartty
controlled effral." s^d Guy.
"By that. I mean we will 1^
doing our homework. We are
going to have people going
full-time on this thing in con¬
junction with OLC staff.
"And you should remember,
we have mo«t of the key
unions affiliated to the fed."
Meanwhile, men like Lynn
Williams cite k>i^ lists of "lu¬
dicrous" Anti-Inflation Board
decisions as ample reason for
labor to rise up on its hind
begs Oct. 14. It is also a
means of convincing those
who must be convinced If the
program is to work — the
union members themselves.
"In all conscience we ha\'e
no alternative but to join the
national day of protest and
keep on fighting to protect our
contracts and our bargaining
relationships until the prime
minister regains his senses."
Williams says.
PA[,,MER, Alaska (AP) —
A mixierate earthquake shoe*
the most populous parts of
Alaska Saturday but caused
no significant damage, the
National Oceanic qnd Atmo-
8]iheric Administration said.
An official at the agency's
Palmer observatory aaid the
epicentre of the quake, which
measured 5.9 on the Richter
scale, was about 150 miles
southwest of Anchorage.
He said the quake w*as felt
strongly on the Kenal Penin¬
sula and was noticeable
throughout Anchorage and
Kodiak Island. However, it
was not strong enough to
create tidal weaves. A radio
reporter In Kodiek said the
tremor there was strong
enough to "wiggle cars a lit-'
tie."
The RicJiter scale is a mea-
suremMit of ground motion as
recorded on seismographs.
Every increase of one
number, say from 5.5 to 6.5,
means the ground motion is
ten times greater. Some ex¬
perts say tite actual amount
of energy relea.sed ntay be 30
times greater.
In populated areas, an
earthquake of five on the
Richter scale can cause con¬
siderable damage and six can
be severe.
Alaska’s last major earth¬
quake occurred on Good Fri¬
day in 1964. It measured 8.5
on the Richter scale.
Calenitt Ntwt Strvict
BEIJ'AST — The wx>men of
Belfast Saturday staged the
biggest peace demonstratiem
ever orgemized in North Ire¬
land.
A 20.000'atrDng tirocession,
which included children and
men. paraded through mainly
Protestant areas in the south
of the city singing hymns and
chanting (lacifist slogans.
The march T>assed <rff with¬
out incident in spite of warn¬
ings from the provisional
wing df the fri.sh Reijubiican
Army, which branded the
women as collaborators and
opportunists.
The women’s peace mov(
ment was created recently
after three children were
killed during a clash between
British soldiers and IRA
Proves.
Last week more than 30.000
Catholics and Protestants
I^araded through Belfast de¬
manding a return to peace.
The women's peace move-
' ment announced Saturday it
has adopted a new tactic to
mobilize Belfast people
against tho.*e responsible for
acta of violence. The or¬
ganizers have decided to
equip their members with
u'histlcs which will be used to
alert their neighbors each
time troublG breaks out be¬
tween the two communities.
The protest mox'cment.
which has received the ap¬
proval of the British authori¬
ties in Ulster, has visibly em¬
barrassed Provo leaders.
They have reaffirmed tiicy
will continue to fight until the
British withdraw their troops
from toe province and until
the establishment of a social¬
ist Irish republic.
Liza has invitation
to meet Cousteau
MADISON. Wl*. (UPl) -
Liza Diprima. the young girl
wW enlisted Amy Carter in
her campaign against kllHng
animals (ur fun or fur, has
been Invited to meet Jacques
Cousteau Aug. 28 in Mil¬
waukee.
Liza, the nine-year-old
daughter of Richard and Ju¬
dith Diprima. of Madison, and
founder of Animal 5teving As¬
sociation, has been invited to
meet the environmentalist
and underwater exi)lorer at a
symposium s|>onsored by the
Cousteau Societ>'.
Liza recently asked Amy,
daughter of Democratic presi-
d e n t i a I nominee Jimmy
Carter, to join the association.
Amy Carter accepted, and
since then, the Cousteau Soci¬
ety. Senator Gaylord, Nelson
and the National Humane So¬
ciety have joined.
$500
REWARD
Dasparata affod (or Infor¬
mation on ths wharaabouts
of Suzatte. my littia whita
and gold Pomarsnlan dog.
Black ayaa and noaa. 11
yra. old. Wandarad from
Cadboro Bay area July 11
Call anytima 477-3447 or
658-6694.
^Elephant’ oil find
coming for B.C.?
What are you doing
the rest of your
life?
Decide
You'll probably Mrn quits s lot
of money over your working
years. But when It comes time to
retire, what then? You'll want to
keep on living the lifestyle you've
grown accustomed to, but you
need to make decisions today
tor a financially secure future.
I can help. Call me.
“Whan You Think of Mo, Doni Think of Inouronco—But,
Whon You Think ct Inouronco, Think of Mo."
PETER P. LOVRIC--BB5>5791
Thinking with you.
/l/fanu^Life
TV MaMfactarers life laeeraace Ceaiper.6
B.C.'s oil Industry is ex- ]
panding and there is a chance I
toe province can become self-
sufficiMit in oil. Premier Ben¬
nett w'as quoted as saying Fri- ■
day night at a confer- I
ence in Vancouver. |
New Westminster radio sta¬
tion CKNW reported Bennett
aaid toe level of oil drilling |
has reached a peak and he I
found this encouraging. \
He said the gov'emment Is '
receiving higher and higher
bids for the right to explore
for oil in the nrMihem half of
toe province and that he
would back up his statement
with siatistics on his return to
Victoria.
The premier has been at¬
tending toe provincial [>re-
miers* conference in Alberta.
^ETTABLEt
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Homemade liver paste, salami and smoked ham,
garaisbed witk freach pickles.
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daily favorite soup
LA SALADE VERTE DU CHEF
the chef's greea salad
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orange mousse
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Dear Dr. ThoateMn: About
two and a half years ago my
tongue became Very irritated.
It aemed to have a stinging-
typo feeling to it. I went to
my regular doctor, who said
it was probably a vitamin C
deficiency and did not think it
was important.
Later. I went to a clinic and
was examined by a doctor.
TTrst. in a loud voice toe
whole clinic could hear, he
said, "You have what is
called hairy tongue." He told
me it woidd not get better
until I quit smoking. He tofd
me to take some high-potency
vitamins and to quit.
My tongue has improved 75
per cent since I quit smoking,
but it is still slightly sensitive.
$Vhat can I do. What vitamins
should I take? And just what
Your
Good
Health
is a hairy tongue?^Mra. G.D.
Except for the nvxnentary
embarrassment in the clinic-
you seem to have gotten both
good di^nosis and good ad¬
vice.
Althoi^h il*s called "hairy
tongue,’’ It is not exactly that.
It's glossitis (the medical
name for any tongue Inflam¬
mation) in which there can be
a build-up of tiny threadlike
pmjections (.papillae). These
can give the appearance of
hairiness. But hair doesn't
grow where there are no hair
follicles.
It's true that smo4cing can
cause this as can some of the
mouthwashes. Glossitis can
al.wi result from antibiotic
thw-apy.
And, of coiLTse. vitamin de¬
ficiency. as both doctors told
you. can play a role — parlic-
ulariy of the B group. You
should also be checked for
anemia, another cause of ton¬
gue disorders.
Having stopped smoking
you have improved 75 per
cent. There may be some lin¬
gering effects from all that
smoke irritatlofi over the
years, but wHh smoking in
your past you should impiVjv'e
the remainii^ 25 per cent In
time.
The Weather
AUGUST ZZ, 1976
Mainly cloudy with a few
aberwers. Winds light. Satur¬
day's precipitation nil. Sun¬
shine 9 hours, 12 minutes. Re¬
corded high end low at Vic¬
toria 20 and 8. Today's fore¬
cast high 19. Today's sunrise
6:17, sunset 8:13: moonrise
3:15 a.m.. moonset 6:19 p.m.
Monday outlook ; Unsettled.
East coast of Vancouver Is¬
land — Mainlycloudy with a
few showers. Winds light. Sat¬
urday’s precipitation nil. Re
cortM hl^ and low at Nanai¬
mo 20 and U. Forecast high
19. Monday outlook: Un¬
settled.
West coast of Vancouver Is¬
land » Madidy cloudy with a
few showers. Winds light.
Forecast high at Tofino 17.
Mcmday outlook; Unsettled.
Extended outlook Ttiesday
through Thursday — Chance
ot rain at times. Cool.
St. Jehn'3
Halifax
Predtricfon
Chariottatawn
AAonirMi
Ottawa
Toronto
Norm Bay
Churchill
The Paa
Thunitar Bav
Ktnora
Winnlpag
Branoon
2 < 17 —
Pori sf John
Paaca Rivtr
Yailowknita
Saatllt
Spekant
Portland
San Franclscq
Los AneaiH
Phoanix
Las Vaoas
Chicaoo
Now York
Miami
Has a Thrifty Overhead Cam Piston Engine
if r
Reqii
ina
—kafoon
Princa Albtrt
N. Banitford
Swift (Uirrant
Madkina Hat
Lathbridga
Calaary
Edmonton
Cranbrook
Castieaar
Panticton
Pavalstoka
Vsneouvar
Princa Ruoart
Tarraca
Sitweri
Port Hardy
Tofino
Comox
Princa (Jaorat
Wiliia.ms Laka
Blue RIvar
KamtooM
Dawson City
Whltahorsa
Oaasa Laka
Port Nalson
TIDIS AT VICTORIA HARBOR
(Tidaa Mstad art
Pacitic Standard Timai
_ t.M._Pt,'H.M^t.'»^M^Ft.'H.M._Ft,
20 05.30 3 T 0 13*00 7 .biu .30 7'.5 2 L 0 S t.i
21 06.05 3.6 13.45 7.2 17.15 7 . 5 , 22.10 1.4
22 06.55 24 ) 5.90 7 . 5111.00 7 . 3123.30 I S
TIDtS AT SOOKB
iTlma Ht.iTlma Ht.lTlma Ht.lTIma Ht
IH.M. Pt.IM.M . Ft.^H .M. Ft.lH.M. Ft
20 Oloe 3J11.1S 7.1111.30 7.6'3bT3S 0.3
21 105.30 3.5 1345 74 14.45 7.5 21.30 f.5
23 ^06.15 3.3 13.15 7.1 16.15 7.4 23.30 fr7
TIDIS AT FULPORD HARBOUR
ITlma Ht.lTIma Ht.lTIma Ht.lTIma Ht
IH.M. Ft.lH.A^ Ft.'H.M. Ft.lH.M. F».
20 06.35 3.4115.20 9.6 10.05 1.9123.30 9.7
21 07.20 3.0:15.45 10.0120.05 I.Sl
n 00.15 9.t!0l.10 3.7iU.30 10.3 30.51 1.5
CANADA’S LOWEST PRICE SEDAN
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2 LOCATIONS; 810 Johnson—385-1481 Colwood: 1619 Island Highway—476-8211
Truck slams cars,
Vast crater
£)dil; Colonist victom, B.C., suitaay, Ausuat 32, 1976
Freighter blazing
17 Crease Avenue, Victoria • Phone 384-4144
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ow many timca have you got a
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eight die in flames
VALLEY VIEW', Ohio
(UPI)v— At least eight people
were killed and Ifi others in¬
jured in a series of expliMions
and fires vdien a tractor-
trailer truck sped out of con¬
trol (kmit a long, steep hill
and crashed into 10 cars
stofiped for a traffic light.
iSiick driver J<^ Harris.
56, Detroit, told police the
brakes failed as he started
down Granger Koad Hill.
The hill turned into a holc^
caust of flames and screams
as the truck slammed into the
cars at the'Canai Road inter¬
section.
Police said the truck, which
skidded into the rear of two
Ontario
smash
kills four
DirrroN. Ont. (CPl — An
Ohio man and three members
of a Wallaceburg, Ont., family
were killed Sati^ay in an ac¬
cident involving four tractoi^
trailers and two cars on a
freeway near this community,
25 miles southwest of London.
Police idmtified the dead 'as
iRonald (Longberry, 62, of Ant-
weip, Ohio; Albert McCrack¬
en, 57, his wife Madeline, 41,
and son Steven, 12, all Wal-
Jacebui^g.
Another member of the
McCracken family, IS^ear-
old Pamela, wtas in London
hospital.
Police said the accid^t
happened on Highway 401 dur¬
ing a heavy fog and the limits
ed-acces8 highway had to be
closed for about seven hours.
Drivers of the tractor^
trailers were not injured.
Another accident invohing
two more heavy trucks hap¬
pened vdiile traffic was ti^
up. There were no injuries in
the seccMid accident.
cars, jackknifed and rolled
over and crushed several
cars, was in fifth gear Instead
of second or low gear, as rec¬
ommended on a lighted sign
atc^ the hill.
Because of this, Hanns may
face charges, police said.
Police said nine died in the
crash, but the coroner’s office
said only eight bodies had
been brought in.
Tim Adams, 19, who works
at a nearby sendee stati<m,
said he heard the truck’s horn
blow three times before the
crash.
“There was nothing we
could do,” said Patre^man
Tim Aughinbough, one of the
first police officers to arrive
at the Scene. "People were
screaming for help. With the
heat and flames, we couldn't
grt close to the cars.”
He said Carl RiAci saved
Sieve Mazuchowski, 16, by
pushing him out of the burn¬
ing car they w'ere in. RUici
dic^ in the flames.
under ice
rM)IANAlK>LlS (UPI) —
An IndUtmi nclenlist reikorts
evidence of * lS0-inUe>wid«
crater under Ice near the
South Pole, the result of what
he believes to be the largest
meteorite ever to strike the
earth.
I>r. John Welhaupt cak’u*
lates the crater was formed
by a meteorite to
miles across, weighing IS bli-
^ lion tons, which hit the earth
at a speed of 44,OAO miles an
hour between 600,000 and
700,000 years ago.
Cargo blocks firemen
DESTREHAN, La. (UPT) —
Fire erupted below decks
aboard a 7004bot freighter in
the Mississippi River Saturn
day and syire^ through much
of the ship. A potenhaJly pt^-
iionous chemical cargo pre¬
vented flirennen from fighting
the flames with water.
“The vessel is reported to
be carrying the chenwal fer-
rosilicone.” said coast guard
spokesman Ken Freeze. "Thifi
chemical is reported to pro¬
duce toxic fumes when it
comes in contact with water.”
Most of the crewmen aban¬
doned the ship, which showed
black smoke and flames
above decks, and were res¬
cued by f«Ty boats and other
vessels in the vicinity. A
smaU squad of officers and
crewmen remained aboard to
Aght the blaze, but no one
knew immediately what tech¬
nique to use bemuse at the
ferrosllicone.
Authorities said two crew'-
men were missing, but no
other injuries were reported.
Freeze identified the ship as
the freighter Green Island. He
said it was anchored toward
the eastern bank of the river
some 25 miles upriver from
New Orleans.
“The (coast guard) rescue
coordination centre in New
Orleans has been in contact
with the national response
centre in Washingt<^, and
they’re trying to come up
with an effective method to
Aght this Are,” Freeze said.
“As of right now they say.
Don’t pump any water onto
It.”
Local authorities working
from ferry boats at the scene
said the Are might have been
set off by an exi)lo64<si in the
Ip’s engineroom. They
mailed in experts from a
nearby Shell (Ml Co. refinery
to help decide the type of
chemical to smother the Are.
Kiaeze said if the chemical
contained a high concentra¬
tion of silicone, it could also
IJToduce toxio fumes when
burned. The silicone concen-
tiation of the ftreen Island
cargo w'as unknown.
St. Charles Parish sheriff’s
officers and coast guard of-
Acials surveyed the scene
from » helicopter to deter^
mine whether to order an
evacuation of h6mes neai* the
river.
Two large grain elevatora
and t^ schools are located
on the river in that area.
Fire truc-ks from nearby
towns were floated to the ship
on ferry boats, and a Areboet
was sent from New Orietms.
but the equipment could not
be used because of the chemi¬
cal's toxic reaction to water.
It may be 20 days
till volcano blows
POINTE-A-PITRE, (iuade-
loupe (AI^) — After a week of
pr^cting an explosion within
days, scientists said Saturday
La SouCriere volcano on the
French Caribbean terriUay of
Guadeloupe was stiU expected
to blow up, but it mi^t be
”20 days or even longer.”
Some of the 73,000 residents
evacuated from the area
around the volcano earlier
W'ere allowed to return under
close supervision to work the
fields Friday and Saturday
and to pick up personal
belonging. But everyone was
ordered to leave the danger
aiea again at nightfall.
The evacuated sectuxi
stretches for several mile.s
south of the 4813-foot smoking
and rumbling La SouAiere.
Soldiers ware still moving
records and furniture out of
government buildings in the
capital Saturday, and some
remained in the city to main¬
tain vital communications.
WE TRADE GUNS
jXTERN^p NAL
$74 YATES 8T. 383-24ZZ
6-21 (scfOM from the Pott Office)
Dash for safety
Students carry wounded classmate to cover in
Bangkok Saturday during a rally attacked by sup¬
porters of fonner Thai military strongman FYaphas
Chainsathien, whose I'etum from exile in Taiwan
last week brought on or'^nal demonstration. Stu¬
dents, hit by automatic rifle fire and plastic explo¬
sives, Imported one dead and 37 wounded.
$1 million fine to wash car
BRUSSEtS (UPD — Fine*
up to million and prison
sentences up to Ave years
await Belgians caught violat¬
ing new water conservation
regulations published Satur¬
day.
The tough government regu¬
lations were issued as parts of
Euix^ suffered the worst
drought in 250 years.
A decree signed by Eco¬
nomics Minister Fernand Her¬
man imposed Anes from 5100
to $1 million and prison sen¬
tences ranging from one
month to Ave years for wast¬
ing water.
Arab states put up
$2 billion for Egypt
CAIRO (UPl) — After four
days of negotiations. Egypt
and four Arab states signed
an agreement Saturday set¬
ting up a $2 billion fund to
bolster Egypt’s sagging econ-
omy, government soui'ces
said.
Bowing to Cairo's demands,
the agreement left the door
open for additional financial
assistance over and above the
52 billion.
The fund, which Is called
the “Gulf authority for devel¬
opment in the Arab republic
of Egypt,” was creal^ by
Saudi Arabia. Kuwait, Qatar
and the United Arab
Emirates.
The accord was signed by
Egyptian Finance Minister
Ahmed Abu Ismail, and his
Saudi Arabian counterpart,
Mohammed Abal Khail, on
behalf of the fund's founders.
Abal Khail will serve as
chairman of the fund’s boaid
of governors.
“The authority w'ill use its
capital, which is 52 billion, as
well as any additic^al finan-
c i a 1 resources, including
loans, for the realization of Its
objectives,” the agreement
said.
'Ihe decree banned sprink¬
ling lawns, roofs and walls,
w'ushing cars end sidewallcs,
filling private swimming
pools. Ponds and fountains
and any industrial use not re¬
quired for production or per¬
sonnel. 'The pool ban included
small inflatables.
Early last month, the gov¬
ernment asked provincial gov¬
ernors to take similar mea¬
sures and called on the popu¬
lation to restrict the use of
water, but ofAcials said be¬
cause of the prolonged
drought, wrater consumptUn
actually Increased. The gov¬
ernment hopes to reduce
water consumption by 10 per
cent.
While weathermen forecast
continued dry and sunny
weather. The Eun^ean Com¬
mon Maritet predicted a drop
in fruit and vegetable produc¬
tion.
The market’s statistical of¬
fice estimated ^iple produc¬
tion at six million tons, 21 per
cent less than last year. But
pear production was expected
to be only slightly lower toan
in 1975 and there is an abun¬
dant harvest of peaches and
prunes.
The vegetable situation is
worse, the ofAce said. Tomato
production is ex|)ected to drop
from 4.8 milllcn tons in 1975 to
3.9 million tons this year.
FREE PILL
20,000 Yards
Hauling Charges Only
O.K. TRUCKING COMPANY LTD.
382-6136
Althou^ final Agures are
not yet available, consider¬
able declines also are expect¬
ed in artichoke, carrot, pea
and bean prodtiction.
last week, the statistical of¬
fice warned that the commu¬
nity’s grain and {K>tato
harvest would suffer greatly
from the drought.
From Britain.
At last!
Now in B.C cxclurively M
Traditional Furniture Limited
Just arrived! Our hm siupmeni of
Ercol furniture, superbly crafted in
elm and beech, arvj brautifully
complimented by famous Sandersons
upholstery! Is Ercol an old-favoritef
Is Ercol new to you? Came see it at
McKellar’s. (Much of this first
shipment is already sold.)Claaed Mondays.
605G No. 3 Rowl. Richmond 273-4148
WEDNESDAY
GOLDEN AGE DAY
IS A DILLER!
Anyone 65 years and over enjoys free
admission to the PNE grounds from 10:30 a m.
on Aug. 25.
There's so much to enjoy!
At the big 1:30 matinee in the Coliseum,
Golden Agers can take in the fabulous
"Phylll* Dlller” show for Just $1.00.
She's hilarious, she's zany-even funnier
than she is on TV.
'Your day will be filled with one fascinating
exhibit after another. The famous Carlsberg
Champions-eight Belgian show horses pulling
a wagon entirely crafted from solid oak. will
tug at ygur memory! The Horticulture Show in
the Forum is an oasis of beauty. And everywhere
you'll enjoy beautiful Hawaiian music, flowers
and color-a highlight of this year's PNE
>PNE
Phonu B.C. Hydro (324-3211) tor "Expraet But" MotmUon
c
"An Independent Newspaper . . . The Organ of No Clique or Party"
1858
Pubiiitiffl every morntog excep* Mondey by The CoJontst Publitbert Limited et 2621 Dougtes
Street, Victoria, B.C , V8W 2N4. Second class mail registration number 0516. All undelivered
copies or any notices respecting changes of address are to be sent to the above address. Member
Audit Bureau of Circulation
RI(:H.\RD bower - Publisher and Editor-in-Chief
1976
PAGE 4
SUNDAY, AUGUST tt, 1(76
Canada and the Israeli boycott
«
T HHEK weeks ago in this column The Daily
Colonist strongly criticized Ottawa for its at¬
titude of indifference toward the fact that certain
federal departments and private Canadian firms are
actively supporting the Arab economic boycott against
Israbl.
Recalling Prime Minister Trudeau's pious
pronouncement of some 15 months ago that the Arab
boycott was "alien to everything the government
stands for and indeed what, in general, Canadian
ethics stand for", the Colonist urged the Trudeau ad¬
ministration to demonstrate to Canadians and the rest
of the world that it is ready to stand on the principles
to which it pays such glib lip service.
Subsequently another violation of the ethics, of
which Mr. Trudeau speaks so highly, emerged when it
was discovered that the Canadian high commission of-
tice in London was providing a “notary" service for
Canadians who wish^ to prove that their religion was
not Jewish.
In the lace of considerable adverse criticism in the
daily press the External Affairs Department quickly
cancelled this activity which it admitted as being
inappropriate" because it gave the appearance of
Canadian support for the Arab boycott of Jews and
Jewish-owned companies.
The speed with which Ottawa acted on this par¬
ticular instance is laudable. However, the main issue
has still not been resolved, nor will it be until the
federal government musters sufficient intestinal for¬
titude to publicly state its positioh on the boycott
clearly and authoritatively.
Ottawa has three options open to it; it can refuse
to bow to intimidation and reject the boycott, it can
turn its back on principles, bow to economic and
diplomatic blackmail and accept the boycott, or it can
attempt to reach a compromise.
But one option it does not have is that of delaying a
decision much longer. Already its dithering record on
the issue is appalling. Fifteen months ago Prime
Minister Trudeau gave every indication that Canada
would reject the Arab boycott, five months ago In¬
dustry Minister Donald Jamieson implied that the
matter was still in doubt but that cabinet would be
reaching a decision within two weeks, and last week
External Affairs Minister Allan MacEachen let it be
known that cabinet would determine a Canadian policy
by early fall. "
A little additional light has now been shed on the
murky subject by Globe and Mail reporter John King
in a copyright story from Ottawa. His report reveals
that the government is now studying a secret Cabinet
memorandum whicji expresses the opinion that the ef¬
fect on Canadian companies of the Arab boycott
against Israel has been exaggerated by pro-Israel
lobbyists.
Without elaborating, the memo says that the
boycott does not appear to discriminate against the
Jewish race or religion but is an emotional issue.
However, many Canadians, it says, find the "inclusion
of non-commercial or particularly political undertak¬
ings in commercial contracts” repugnant.
The document suggests four approaches Ottawa
take, but warns that if Canada acts on its own in op¬
posing the boycott, "too strong a stand would probably
provoke the Arab states and seriously undermine
Canadian trade” with the Arab countries. Canada’s
boycott policy must be “consistent with our policy of
balance and objectivity toward the Arab-Israeli dis¬
pute.”
If Canada’s stand is too strong and is seen by the
Arabs as pro-Zionist, “retaliation could be expected”
perhaps taking the form of a complete embargo of
Canada. If this should happen Canada would stand to
lose a multi-million-dollar market and an important
source of crude oil, the memorandum says.
And this, the Cabinet document suggests, would
“probably have serious effects on the Canadian
economy in the nature of oil shortages and un¬
employment.”
It is interesting to note at this time that in 1975
Canada’s trade with the Arab countries amounted to
$165 million (out of our total exports of some $33 bil¬
lion) while Arab sources provided 40 per cent of our oil
imports for the same period.
The memorandum then outlines the four pos¬
sibilities Ottawa might consider. They are:
• Legislation prohibiting Canadian firms from
adhering to boycotts imposed by foreign countries
against a third country. This would have a serious
negative effect on the Canadian economy if it resulted
in trade being restricted and Arab oil cut off.
• Forbidding government support for any project
requiring Canadians to comply with a foreign
country’s boycott of a third country, cdndemnlng
economic boycotts and obliging Canadian companies
to report instances of being asked to comply with such
boycotts. This is close to the U.S. position on the Arab
boycott.
• Forbidding government support ef projects re¬
quiring ' compliance with a boycott, condemning
boycotts and obliging firms to report instances of be¬
ing asked to comply with boycotts, but only boycotts
found to discriminate against Canadian citizens or
firms on the basis of race, color, religion, sex or
national origin. This would probably allow firms to
continue to sign contracts with boycott clauses and
would not resolve the issue publicly.
• Forbidding government support of contracts
containing provisions discriminating against a race,
religion or ethnic group and issuing a statement reaf¬
firming Canada’s opposition to discrimination, reaf¬
firming its policy of trading in peaceful goods with all
countries and reaffirming that in Canada’s economic
syston, choosing trading partners and contract terms
is generally the responsibility of individual private
firms. This would avoid a confrontation with the
Arabs, establish a less severe stance than that taken
by the United States, but might expose Canadian ex¬
porters to more onerous boycott clauses than they
have had to date.
These then, it must be presumed, are the alter¬
native routes now under study by the Trudeau Cabinet.
Judging from its present attitude as well as its past
record on matters of principle it should not be too dif¬
ficult for the average Canadian to predict which road
it will select.
Rest awhile
ByW. H.OoW
How gross the growth
By RICHARD JACKSON
Ottawa Offbeat
On the financial pages the
economists are walling the
blues.
No zing in the economy.
They just aren't looking in
the right place where the going
is just great.
The place where it all hap¬
pens. where the taxes are im¬
posed, collected and spent, and
where controls are clamped on
everybody but the clampers.
Like always, the good times
are rolling in the only Industry
that enjoys everlasting expan¬
sion.
Especially of the payroll.
That’s right, the industry of
government.
And it's not just in this first
year of controls when the feds
are holding back on everyone
else while letting themselves
go.
♦ ♦ ♦
It's been that way ever since
Pierre Trudeau took over the
parliamentary shop eight years
ago.
Now it's all come hanging out
as a result of some
knowledgeable digging by
David Orlikow, New
Democratic MP for Winnipeg
David Orlikow asked how
many executive types there
were In the $30,000 to $00,000
bracket on the government
payroll when Pierre Trudeau
first took over public service
top management, and how
many now.
The figures of 381 then and
1,300 at last head count
calculated to a staggering 231
per cent incresse.
* ★ ■fk
lliis enormous growth was
mostly at the top, lor during
the same period the staff itself
grew from 379.000 to 405,000, or
only 22 per cent.
Ho hum, you say, you jaded
old taxpayer you, so what else
is new?
So get this ... last year
there were 4,425 getting better
than $10,000 who drew more
than another $1,000 In over¬
time.
And for 208 of them, the ove^
time ran $5,000 and on up.
David Orlikow neglected to
ask how high was “up,” and
naturally Treasury Board was
not volunteering this kind of In¬
formation calculated to blow a
taxpayer’s fuse.
SUM blase?
Well, how about this — ex¬
cluding the far-travelled staff
of National Defence, Man¬
power and Immigration and In¬
dustry Trade and Uommerce
which necessarily operate on
something of a global scale, an
average of 8,407 public ser¬
vants flew out for faraway
places in recent years with the
MU running Just short of an an¬
nual $7 miUion.
The Federal Export Develop¬
ment CorporaUon was the Mg-
gest travM spender — and that
figured, because if overseas
business Is to be promoted, it
has to be pushed abroad — with
the average cost per employee-
trip running $5,OT.
•W * W
Ranking second at $3,502 for
each trip was External Affairs
foreign aid. And that perhaps
figured.
But Information Canada? In
fourth place, with the average
trip cost at $2,088? And Infocan
no longer in business!
Ah. that David Orlikow. He
isn’t your ordinary NDP
politician who figures that as
long as the government does it.
nobody could possibly do It bel¬
ter.
No indeed. David is
downright suspicious of the
motivation of some
bureaucrats, usually assumed
by the NDP to be Uly-white
it it it
' For he asks for what he calls
the “favorite haunts” of the
govemment’s executive types.
Uie nabobs of the Mandarinate,
those Department Deputies.
Crosm Corporation Presidents
and Federal Agency Chairmen.
To what he Usts as “warm
climes,” 29 tripe last year were
made, 10 each to the Caribbean
and South Pacific, four to Mex¬
ico. three to North Africa, and
two to Hawaii.
To what he referred as
“scenic capitals,’’ 188 junkets
were jaunted, 43 each to Paris
and Washington,'31 to London.
18 to New York, nine to Rome,
seven to Tokyo, six each to
Stalingrad and Geneva, and
five to Hong Kong.
Happy landings.
/ Beg to Differ
The
in these permissive days
there is a lot of talk about cor>
ruption and bribery ~ about
vast sums of money being sent
to foreign banks for
laundering,' and then return*
ing to illegally line the pockets
ul public officials.
This means, of course, that a
lot of us read these stories and
then say things like “tish
lush, ' and ask each other what
kind ot people let themselves
be bribed.
In fact, the other day at lunch
alter reading about the
latest bribery stories out of
Japan — 1 was doing just this.
Then it occurred to me that I
was a bit of a hypocrite. After
all I was condemning
something 1 knew nothing
about.
You see. 1 have to confess
that nobody has ever tried to
bribe me.
★ ★ ★
That being the case, how do f
know how 1 would react If such
an unlikely thing did occur?
The old adage has it that every
man has his price.
Do 1 have a price?
In other words, if somebody
offered me a million dollar
bribe, what would ! do?
Personally I believe that 1
would do as 1 usually do in a
moment ui crisis panic. I
mean, it is one thing to read
about money being
laundered'* so it can t be
traced, but how does one ac*
tually go about this business?
FYpm what 1 have read 1 un¬
derstand. albeit it dimly, that
this has something to do with
opening bank accounts in
places such as Switzerland or
booming big bribery business
By FRANK LOWE from Moatreil
Mexico. But what Is the exact
procedure? Does one walk into
a Swiss or Mexican bank and
politely ask the manager about
the efficiency of his
"laundering” services?
Anyway, say this rather
naive approach worked —
although 1 doubt that It would
— and I have my million dol¬
lars, less a few bucks for
■ laundering ’ services. What
do 1 do then?
You see. 1 have a hunch that
if I did get my nice, clean
money back home and went
into my bank here and said 1
would like to make a little
deposit, about a million dollars
worth, there would be some
nasty speculation.
Even if that million dollars
had been ‘laundered ” to within
an inch of its life.
So that is out. Yet, as one
can't simply carry around a
million bucks in one's pants
pocket, it has to be stashed
somewhere. The bank is out —
so you tuck your newly ac¬
quired but highly illegal gelt in
a shoe box at home.
Then the question arises —
how do you spend it? A million
dollars is not worth anything
unless you can buy things with
it.
Yet if I suddenly acquire a
Rolls Royce. a Russian Sable
coat for my wife and a chalet in
the sun, people are going to
become curious. At least. I
believe they will.
And somehow I feel that an
airy explanation, such as.
"Just got a little raise.” is not
going to satisfy this curiosity.
So I have a million dollars.
But I edn’t spend it. Which is
the equivalent of having no
dollars. What Is the solution?
Well, I recall having read
that some people in this kind of
a situation have taken up
residence in countries where
no questions are asked if you
are well-heeled, and there are
no extradition treaties.
Brazil, for instance. I merely
go up to my wife one day and
say, "Let’s pack it in, dear, and
go and live in Rio de Janeiro.
I try that sentence over in
my mind and immediately
realize it wouldn’t work.
* * *
My wife. I am sure, wold not
like the idea of moving to Rio.
Heck, she almost divorced me
some years ago when I Insisted
on digging her out of her cosy
nest and moving a measly 5tX)
miles. My wife doesn’t put
down roots. She has founda¬
tions.
Eventually I have to give up
the idea of what 1 would do if I
was handed a million dollar
bribe — mainly because 1 final¬
ly realize that the people who
write so knowingly about
such things don’t reveal the
ground rules. '
Also, as I am fantasizing
away about having a million
bucks tucked Into my greedy
little paws, I also realize that
there is one other point I have
overlooked. Why, for inataoce.
would anybody believe 1 was
worth a million dollar bribe?
As I understand it, the person
being bribed is suppo^ to
render some service to the
briber in return. About the only
service I could render any
briber would be to introduce
him to the best martini build.er
in town, and while that is no
small service — is it worth a
million?
All of which makes me
wonder if 1 am pure because of
my high principles, or whether
I am pure because I am un¬
worthy of being bribed.
North.
Yes, sure. New Dents are
supposed to be all hot for big
government, but David
Orlikow perhaps has been
around long enough — 14 years
and six Parliaments — to
wonder if bigger equals better.
So he asked some canny
questions and got some
astonishing answers.
★ * ★
Canny, because he asked
them over a period of time In
the House of (kimmoos so as
not to alert a suspicious
government that perhaps he
was on to something.
And astonishing because by
its own figures the government
reveals how gross ils growth.
The Now Society
'VJo news is good news becouM only bod news is
news ”
Where Bering split two worlds
A hunt for early man
From the National Geographic Society
Exactly 248 years ago this summer, a
Danish sailor working for the czar of Russia
discovered the North American contibent.
Not Columbus. In 1492 he found the scat¬
tering of islands in the Caribbean that hq
thought was the fabled Indies of spices and
Oriental riches.
Not the Vikings, who briefly beached their
longboats on Vlnland — today’s
Newfoundland—in the 11th century. And not
the Pilgrinu of the Mayflower or the
Jamestown colonists: their new land was
merely a haven for religious freedom and a
promise of a better life.
But to Vitus Jonassen Bering, North
America was a continent and he proved it.
UnknowUngly, he also sailed over one of the
world’s great migration routes, the drowned
land bridge between Siberia and Alaska.
Peter the Great sent this Danish adven¬
turer to what is now called the North Pacific
In 1724. Bering’s mission: to determine
whether Asia and America were connected
by land.
♦ ♦ *
Four years later, with a ship he had built
at the mouth of the Kamchatka River in
Siberia, he and a crew of 44 sailed northward.
On July 13,1728. he turned around and headed
back, having reached 07° 17’ north latitude.
He had sailed through what today's maps
identify as the Bering Strait and concluded
there were, in fact, two worlds, two
continents—Asia and North America. He
never saw Alaska. He found It in 1741 on
another trip.
This second expedition ended with Bering
dying of scurvy on December 19 on the
Siberian Island that now bears his name.
Most of the crew also died of scurvy.
A far vaster land, a land never seen by
modem man. is named for him, too. It is
Beringia, the continental shelf that stretches
beneath icy but open waters between Alaska
and Siberia, at one point only 53 miles apart.
This submerged land covering pertiaps
hundreds of thousands of square miles is a
strangely flat and featureless plateau that
lifts from the North Pacific deep and stretches
a thousand miles north beneath the Bering
Sea, the Bering Strait, and the Chukchi Sea,
which is a part of the deeper Arctic Ocean.
Much of the Beringia plateau is only about 120
feet below the ocean surface.
The last time anybody saw Beringia. the
last time a man could walk across it
migrating from Siberia to Alaska, was about
10,000 or so years ago. That is when the last
ice age glaciers melted enough to flood the
land bridge.
★ it it
Geologists say that was perhaps the last ol
a number of times the land bridge had been
drowned by thaws in an only partly under¬
stood climate change lasting thousands ol
years. During the freeze, the bridge
gradually emerged as the oceans’ water
evaporated and then fell as snow, which then
remained frozen solid into the ice covering
much of northern Europe, Siberia, and the
North American continent.
The land bridge carried man, at first
perhaps only on a farther-than-usual bunting
foray, as well as prehistoric horses and
camels, which eventually disappeared in
North America, and the white pine, which
vanished in Siberia.
Early man gradually made his way south
between the melting glaciers to land that was
free of ice. Signs of his lile—his tools,
weapons, and the bones of the animals he
hunted—are being sought today by
archeologists in Siberia, Alaska, Canada, and
(Colorado.
it it it
Meanwhile, nothing seems to be happen¬
ing to a Russian proposal to dam the Bering
Strait and pump warmer Pacific water over
the dam so the frigid Arctic shores could be
warmed enough—in one optimistic
estimate—even for orange groves.
There is one drawback to this idea. In a
matter of years, the Arctic Ice would be
melted, speeding up the fate tbeocetically
coming many hundreds of centuries hence:
All ocean levels would rise enough to drown
the world’s ports and many other cities, too
o
eeissr>’
I
Italy seizing
yachts flying
shadow flags
By WILUAMTUOHY
from Port ’Ercole
Two months ago, the new marina at this
fashionable Mediterranean resort was packed with
handsome yachts. Port officials were looking forward
to a bonanza summer season.
Today, however, the piers and quays that were
built for the largest and most elegant boats are nearly
empty, and harbor people here and elsewhere on the
Italian coast have been hit by a sudden lack of
business.
Ihe reason: Italy’s tax authorities and custorm
Dollce have cracked down on yachts flying the so-
called flags of convenience, or "shadow flags,” mainly
Panamanian and Liberian. These foreign registrations
are a loophole through which Italian boatt(wners avoid
paybig income taxes, the authorities say. They also let
the yachtsmen enjoy the privilege of duty-free cigaret¬
tes and liquor.
The crackdown has resulted in hundreds of
pleasure boats being sequestered — legally seized — in
Italian ports, and most of the other big boats have
shoved off lor safe havens In Corsica, France, Monaco,
Malta, Yugoslavia and Greece.
★ ★ ★
Business is dovm by 30 per cent or more, " said a
marina operator here, 100 miles north of Rome. "Most
of the big boats that spend the money are gone.”
The operator looked on morosely as two tax of¬
ficials accompanied by gray-uniformed police customs
prowled a pier looking for the owners of two power
boats registered in Panama.
"They are after tax dodgers,” the marina man
said. "And that is a good thing. But they should get the
tax evaders without ruining the summer pleasure
boating business.
"There are 75,000 workers Involved In the pleasure
boat industry: Boat building, repair, port handling and
crews. And several new marinas are trying to get
started In Italy. This crackdown Is affecting their
livelihood.”
Italian tax officials estimate that 9,000 foreign-
registered pleasure craft are mooredln Italian ports
— most of them owned by Italians. In a port like Rapal-
lo, 90 per cent of Italian-owned yachts fly foreign flags.
A 1961 law prohibits resident Italian citizens own¬
ing boats under foreign registration from operating in
Italian waters, but the law has been violated flagrant¬
ly
♦ * *
It is a simple matter to register a vessel In
Panama or Liberia, and not much more difficult to set
up a Panamanian or Liberian corporation to operate
the boat. Ihere are several reasons why Italian
citizens take this course, violating the 1961 law — it en¬
titles a buyer to avoid paying the 30 per cent sales tax
on pleasure craft in Italy. (And the boat builder Is able
to obtain a large subsidy from the government for
producing for the "export” market)
• With a foreign flag, boat owners are entitled to
large discounts on fuel and supplies, and they can avoid
Italian union regulations that govern crew working
conditions and salaries.
• Perhaps most important by using a flag of con¬
venience. an Italian citizen is able to disguise the fact
that he owns a boat when it comes to paying Income
tax.
Italian tax authorities, on the assumption that
everyone understates income, take as prima facie
evidence of a higher income such assets as a house, car
— or boat.
★ ★ ★
These assets are supposed to be stated on the tax
form, but admission of boat onwershlp Is tantamount
to doubling one’s Income tax assessment, wcordbig to
boating people.
So a favorite dodge, ItaUan tax men say, is for a
citizen to set up a dummy Panamanian corporation
which leases the boat to another foreign "agent” who
then “charters,” it to the owner.
Of the prevalence of shadow flags in Italy,
hlagistrate Giorgio Vitale of Lucca, says, "’The fact is
that most of the boats with Panamanian flags here
were built in Italy, by Italians, for Italians.”
It was the Lucca judiciary, whose jurisdiction in¬
cludes the big boat-building and operating port of
Vlaregglo on the Tuscan coast, that began the
crackdown in June.
In Italy, local magistrates have made wide in¬
vestigating and prosecuting powers, and the local tax-
men were ordered to sequester and impound large
achts flying foreign flags but believed to be owned by
talians.
* -k -k
I
Now, almost every port magistrate in luly has
followed suit, and the big yachts have either been se¬
questered or have fled Italy.
Neither the Italian Ministry of Marine, which
respects the flags of convenience convention, nor the
Ministry of Tourism, which values the foreign ex¬
change in pleasure boating, is particularly happy with
the tax authorities’ crackdown.
"The big yachting spenders have left,” a boating
official said. ’’And the crackdown has scared off many
legitimate foreign pleasure boats from coming to Italy
because they fear harassment.”
"Boat owners wouldn’t mind paying fair taxes on
their boats.” a marina official said. "But they object
to having their income taxes doubled just because they
own a boat.
★ ★ *
"Many ordinary people have chosen to buy small
boats rather than a second car, and they should not be
unfairly penalixed. ’The Income tax procedure needs
revision.”
With the various legal and governmental jurisdic¬
tions Involved, nobody In the boating business foresees
any quick or simple solution to the problem.
"It’s a complicated thing,” the marina official
said. "Many people are going to be out of jobs, not only
this summer but during the winter when there would
have been repairing, cleaning and storage work to be
done.
"It Is all a real bag of nails for the boating In¬
dustry."
“Let’s finish that cheating fencer story: Comrade Boris
retires from sports to accept position in salt
mining industry.’’
'”rhey’re on a buying trip — let’s hope they’re not
buying our politicians!”
To the editor
1
A certain executive officer of Pacific Command, Royal
Canadian Legion, said at a general meeting, "Do not blame
Pacific (Command for the takeover of Veterans Hospitals.”
All the commands from Halifax to Victoria must take
the blame. ’The executive officers did not have the courage to
fight the government and Department of Veterans Affairs on
the issue, they did absolutely nothing, those socalled
leaders. ’The Royal Canadian Legion has broken its pledge to
our fighting men and women, so must be termed as
hypocritical in this respect.
’The president of the Dominion Command should have
sent directives to all presidents of branches across the
country rquesting them to consult with their membership at
a general meeting (or by mail for non-attendants) deploring
the situation. I can only think that Legion officers must be
afraid of offending the Department of Veterans Affairs and
the present government.
’The stupidity of the takeover was that when the takeover
was completed the federal government paid severance pay
to all personnel employed in Veterans Hospitals, which
resulted in thousands of dollars paid for by yOu and I — the
taxpayer. It has always been my understanding that
severance pay is granted only when an employee has ter¬
minated his j^. Why was this money paid to people who still
kept their job? Veterans Hospitals are being built in Quebec
and Nova Scotia, Shaugbnessy Hospital in Vancouver has
ALL clinics in operation, why close clinics in Victoria?
If, after the newly formed Concerned Veterans Commit¬
tee has made its brief to the Department of Veterans Affairs
about this unfair treatment to Victoria veterans in closing
facilities, and no action is taken, then it will clearly show
that the Legion only wants the veterans’ dues, without giving
the service that these dues buy, then legionnaires must show
their disgust and distrust of an organization which claims it
is something that it is not. By the very fact that the Pacific
- 1
Erma
Bombeck
W 7 .
z__J
ON THE COLORADO RIVER-They were Uying bets
I'd never get here.
"It's a nine-mile hike from the south rim of the Grand
Canyon to the river,” said my husband, "on a narrow path
lousy with sharp rocks.”
“I’ll make it.”
"The temperature in the canyon this time of year can go
to 110 degrees.”
“Not to worry.”
"The river trip is six days on a rubber raft that crashes
into rapids and covers you with water at a temperature of SO
degrees.”
“So?"
“So you sleep on an army cot with no protection from the
elements.”
"I’ll survive.”
"You bathe In the (Colorado, drink it, and are sometimes
nearly drowned in it”
"rU make it.”
"There are no gift shops.”
"Are you serious? When do we have to let them know for
sure?”
1 was kidding, of course. The river had always been my
goal. When my toes turned purple and I cut the soles out of
my shoes, the odds went up.
When I ate three Granola bars during the first hour and
lapped up every bit of water in my canteen, they shook their
heads. When I crawled into a cave with heat exhaustion and
told them to go on, they gave me that "told you so” look.
1 looked longingly at the Colorado River from the shade
In my cave. D^gned ... created . . . decorated ... by
God. No mirrors. No reason to suck in your stomach. No
cause to yell at the kids to turn the lights off. No electrical
outlets to plug In Nell Diamond. A culturally deprived oasis
with no (jolden Arches, no bumper stickers and no reruns.
One of the last places in civilization that time and a two-
year-old could not destroy.
I summoned up the only pedestrian prayer 1 knew from
memory: "Please God, send me a mule.”
Ten minutes later, a man appeared around the bend
dragging six mules with six empty backs.
As the riverboat captain said later. "You’re the only
person to ever descend into the canyon on foot and end up on
her . ..”
Some people get testy when they lose a bet
Ddllp tXOldntSt Vidona, B.C., Sunday, August 22, 1976
1
Tdik Politics with Hume
/•
When Bill Moyers, an American political analyst, was
chatting on televidoo during the Republican convention the
other night, he digressed for a minute to talk about opinion
polls.
Moyers made the point that while "straw polls” or
■ weathervane polls” were interesting and good conversation
pieces, they rarely reflected a true voting pattern.
1 can’t remember his exact words but in paraphrase they
were something like this: "When surveys like that are con¬
ducted people usually come down against whatever party Is
In power simply because that’s the thing to do. We never
really like our government and use the pre-election or post¬
election poll to say so. On voting day, faced with a decision
for change or maintaining the status quo, we often reverse
ourselves.”
The point is made here because a week or so ago B.C. To¬
day, a twice-monthly pubUcation which makes no secret of its .
left-wing lean, conducted a weathervane poll In Victoria among ‘
other places. There is no question that the survey was conducted
fairly.
And there is no doubt that the results were interesting
and make a fine conversation piecer''
In iu party leader popularity standing, B.C. Today
recorded 46.3 per cent of the people polled being in favor of
Dave Barrett as premier. Scott Wallace, the Oak Bay terrier
who leads the Progressive Conservatives, was second choice
with 23.3 per cent. Premier Bennett was a poor third with 18
per cent, and Gordon Gibson trailed with 12.3 per cent. Those
percentages are based on all the areas covered In the survey,
not just Victoria.
In the city itself, four polling divisions were covered but
with only an extremely small percentage of the total voters
being polled.
The people responding to the “secret” questionnaire
voted 45 per cent for the New Democratic Party, 32 per cent
ior the Conservatives, 20 per cent for Social Credit and three
per cent for the Liberals.
A similar pattern was shown in Coquitlam and
Vancouver-South, the other areas surve^.
Indications are that Barrett is jubilant over the results.
Command has stated that it does not back up a proposed
picketing of the Victoria Veterans Hospital (now Memorial
Pavilion) very plainly shows that they are not fighting with
us.
When Legionnaires parade to the Cenotaph on November
11. let all those who have no confidence in the so-called
Legion executive officers responsible for the injustice wear
civilian clothes. In this way, then, the public will know who
the real Legion comrades are — who still use the word com¬
rade — and who do not sit in the clubrooms "guzzling beer. ”
i have a uniform but will wear civilian clothes in protest.
CONCERNED VETERAN,
Victoria.
Wallace slightly unbelieving, Bennett nonchalant and Gordon
Gibson, in Hawaii, unaware and unconcerned.
If you think about It for a minute, all of their responses art
predictable and, at this time, correct.
Barrett, having led his party to disaster last December
and having hardly distinguished himself since, could be ex¬
pected to snatch at any straw offering him hope of revival.
Wallace, having bm on the receiving end for so long, is
grateful for small mercies but Is also far too practical to
dream of becoming premier or the Official Opposition
tomorrow.
Gibson, on vacation, is too much of a politician to let the
survey bother him even if he were home.
And Bennett knows that, even if the survey is a true
reflection of what the voters are thinking today, he has three,
maybe four yean hi which to turn thin^ around.
He. 1 suspect, beUeves firmly what Moyers said. We
always lend, between electfcns, to dislike the government in
power.
But having said all that, there is little doubt that the B.C.
Today survey, even allowing for the Moyers theory, reflects
a current and real antipathy toward Social Credit. And while,
with three or four yean to go, Bennett can afford a little non¬
chalance be can’t afford to entirely ignore the fedlngs of the
people.
On the other hand the survey after eight months in office '
is a shade premature as an omen of dtsaster and Barrett
should leave his Tiffany lamps In their packing cases for a
little while yeL The premier’s office Is occupied, for better or
for worse, for quits a while.
But IK’S get back to Bennett's nonchalance ior a minute.
There has been a rumble for sonne Ume that the big sticks
we are being hit with this year are all part of a Social Credit
rnasterplan. a masterplan so carefully disguised to this point
as to be unrecognizable.
It goes Jlke'this: In this year of 1976 we get all the bad
news. Hie Autoplan rates, taxes, ferries, cutbacks and
general belt-tightening programs. And once in a while we
get a highw^ or a hospital tossed our way to sweeten, if
that’s possible, the bitterness of the pills we’re taking.
In 1977 the pressure slackens a little. The nasty pills still
come but with enough "uppers” among them to balance
things out a Uttle more. s
In 1978, the Socreds’ third year In office, the pendulum
swings and the goodies become more prevalent. In fact, bad
news is out And late that year or in me middle of 1979 with
everything on the upswing, we go to the polls.
There’s only one thing wrong with my theory: I’m not
really sure that Social Credit has a masterplan. Or, if they
have, that they know how to handle it
Maybe it's just slow in emoging.
There are a couple of things to watch for over the next
. few months. If they happen, we’ll know that the theoretical
program advanced here is accurate. If they don’t happen,
we ll know the government is in deep trouble.
First will come the easing of the "everything must pay
its way” philosophy we've already had a bellyful of this year.
ITiat should be followed by an end to "things are bad ...
we have to dig ourselves in” talk, with that line replaced by
some positive thinking.
And then. 1 suspect, the current breed of Social Credit
will rediscover the formula of B.C.'s most successful politi¬
cian. W. A. C. Bennett. Under Wacky. B.C. was always
booming, remember? Having achieved great things we were
always on the verge of achieving even more.
They call it the power of positive thinking. We need a
strong dose of it right now In B.C. and nobody more than the
government.
SUMMER SALE
Official
Suppiiar
toth«1976
Otympic
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386-2491
•'21
9
CDlOntlSt Viotoria. B.C., Sunday, August 22« 1076
Anti-AIB day ‘holiday’
OTTAWA (CP) — Employ,
ers'should take “the adult ap¬
proach" toward workers next
month and not prosecute them
for leaving ^eir jobs in
protest against the anti-infla¬
tion program, John Simonds,
executive Secretary of the Ca-
nadaan Labor Ocmgress says.
He said in an Interview
taped for tnoadcast today on
the CnV program Question
Period that the CLC does not
ocHisider the planned one-day
work stoppage Oct. 14 a gen¬
eral strike.
“It's a national holiday that .
we are calling to tell the
country and the government
that we are not going to put
up with compulsory wage con-
trols,” said Simonds, who is
responsible for coordinating
the planned work stoppages,
rallies and parades.
“This is a day of protest.
It's as simple as that. We are
taking the day off."
He said some businessmen
support the 2.2-mlllicm-
member OLC in its plan for a
day of demonstrations on the
first anniversary of the in¬
troduction of the restraint
program.
However, employers threat¬
ening legal acti(m against
workers \sho participate
should follow the example of
NDP Premier Ed Schreyer of
Manitoba and do nothing, he
said.
Bennett ihants guarantees
B.C. Wder-represented’
VANCOUVER (CP) — B.C.
would like to see guarantees
of greater representation for
the province in the Senate and
Supreme Court if the constitu¬
tion is patriated, Piemier
Bennett said Friday.
The premier told a news
conference that the country
has changed substantially
since the ^tish Nculh Ameri¬
ca Act was prcHTiulgated in
Enjoying their labor
Goats in Cleveland National Fwest, north of San
Diego in California, are on U.S. “payroll” chewing
away dry brush in 300-foot-wide firebreaks. Men
doing same job wift herWddes or machetes would
cost up to $100 an acre. Goats get paid with all the
brush they can eat — tree.
‘Running ICBC into ff’ound'
Cocke criticizes
Sperm antibodies
for contraception
‘open’
msurance
NEW WESTMINffTER (CP)
The Insurance Cbip.
B.C. “will be stuck with the
resl(kie’’ when large insur¬
ance companies begin com¬
peting with it, Dennis CTocke
(NDP—New 'Westminster)
said Friday.
The former IC!BC director
said cMice the provincial gov¬
ernment allowed the sale of
ail but mandatory auto insur-
ance private insurers, the
public insurance company set
up by the fcamer NDP 8d-
ministiiation would find it
very difficult to o$)erate.
C^ke Mid the Social Credit
government was trying to
“run ICBC Into the ground."
He said complaints about
poor service on lOBC claims
were ootstrii^ing complaints
about any other government
service.
OMAHA. Neb. (UPD — A
University of Nebraska re¬
searcher is attempting to de¬
velop a contraceptive for
women by immunizing them
against sperm.
Dr. James McChug, a re¬
search instructor in the
centre’s department of obste¬
trics and gynecology, said he
had induced infertility in fe¬
male test animals giving
them a chemical c<»itaining
sperm antibodies.
“It has bew found that for
an unknown reason some fe¬
males develop an immune re¬
action to spenn," he said.
“When a woman’s Infertility
results from natural causes
without adverse ph>'siological
effects, other than the fertili¬
ty, one wtxiders if these
mechanisms could be induced
in other wxvnen as a form of
contrac^tion.”
McCHurg said the goal of his
research is to develop a con¬
traceptive method which is
easy for the user to ad¬
minister, does not interfere
with normal sexual function
and minimizes the side effects
encountered with other mettw
ods of birth control.
1 8 6 7 and constitutional
changes should reflect this.
Bennett said he pointed out
at the provinci^ premiers
conference that (mtario and
Quebec bad 24 senators each,
while B.C. had only six and
that the twp largest provinces
‘Tomahawk’
protest
falls flat
VTNNTPEG (CP) — Many
booksellers here are continu¬
ing to sell a controversial
book critical of Indian activi¬
ties in Manitoba, despite de¬
mands the book be withdrawn
from sale.
Paper Tomahawks is a crit¬
ical analysis by author James
Buike ot events in recent
years involving Indian people,
the provincial Ridian affairs
department and the Manitoba
iDi^an Brotherhood.
Joan Pair of Queeiston
House Publishing Inc. of Win¬
nipeg said she was continuing
to distribute the bock despite
letters from two lawyers de¬
manding it be withdrewn on
grounds it defamed their
climts.
Both lawyers set deadlines
for the withdrawal, but the
deadlines passed without fur¬
ther developments.
Mrs. Parr indicated the con¬
troversy led to local book¬
stores ordering extra copies.
She said die submitted
copies of the letters to Attor^
ney-general Howard Pawley’s
office and the Manitoba Law
Society because she fdt the
lawyers were exceeding their
authority.
A spokesman for Pawiey
said no action likely would be
taken until the ndnister re¬
turned this week from a con¬
ference outside the province.
were also guaranteed three
supreme court judges each
.while B.C. was currently riot
represented on the court.
“It’s our proposal that we
fake a lock at these imba¬
lances in Confederaticxi and
give some guarantees," he
said.
Bennett did not specify^ how
many senators and supreme
court judges he thought
should come from B.C., but
he stressed that he was op¬
posed to any unilateral action
to patriate the constitution.
“Bringing the constituticm
to Canada or amending it
should be an act ^ unity and
Bulletin
a unilateral action wnuld real¬
ly be an act of divisiveness,’’
he said. “This is not a time to
divide the country."
Prime ^Hnister Trudeau
said earUer that the premierB
had until Sept. IS to devise a
method of bringing the consti¬
tution to Canada from Eng¬
land or the federal govern¬
ment would act on its own.
The premier also said he
propos^ at the conference in
You can usually exchange It
for. say Y amount of another
commodity, but your dollar in 5
years might buy only Vk Y of
another commodity.
EMPRESS COINS
IMIMIlflliGlMMiil f
^l>on Uarcftmti—
6*15 W< apgraist v} O.y t-oin*.
PICTURES
AT NIGHT
Perfaaw you have tried noctur¬
nal coW-snapping. If so, you
know how spectacular the
results can be. What kind of
film to use? Neither artificial
light nor daylight type films
are balanced (or the wide
variety (rf li^t sources found
on a busy city street .so the
choice Isn’t really crit^. The
point is to capture
and feeling of the city after
dark, nbt to reproduce precise¬
ly the colors seen there.
Daylight type films will
render the colors a little
warmer than artificial Ught
films. The choice is yours.
Try some rainy night shots.
The reflections on wet pave¬
ment, and in puddles, give
endless possibilities.. How
about shooting the reflectuxu
only?
For more informatioo in film
types, exposures and equip¬
ment, come and see us at JUS-
KITE PHOTOS where our Cer¬
tified Photographic Consellors
are at your service.
"Service Through
Bxportonoo”
714 YATES ST.
TOWN AND COUNTRY
HILLSIDE
BEACON AVE.. SIDNEY
Jus-Rite
PHOTOS
board
The Cfommittee to Retain
Raw Milk has called a public
meeting at Norway House,
mo HUlside, at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Further information
is available from Van Wil¬
liams at 384-1287.
FOBl'.M
James Bay New Horizons
Society regular forum will
discuss autumn activites and
planning with members as
guests at 10 a.m. Friday at
520 Niagara.
Advertising
helps
good things
happen.
Edmcmton that B.C. be given
veto power on constitutional
ammdments if and wiien the
constitution is patriated.
He noted that Western Can¬
ada has about 30 per cent of
the country’s population, yet
under proposals for constitu¬
tional reform, the four west¬
ern provinces would have only
one veto while the federal
government. Ontario, Quebec
and the Maritimes would have
one each.
He suggested that B.C. be
considered as a separate re-
gi(m as it already was under
many federal programs.
LOCAL and LONG
DISTANCE MOVING
c/ RELIMIETIUN8FE1I
OF VICTORIA tm
Mtmbet ot l/nked Van Unea
3U-M66 4-11
y^ERSOHAL GUMMEDi
VDDnESSUUSEUi ^
Mr. it Mrs. R. Parfaciion
1909 Evaryday St.,
Victoria. B.C. V8V 4P7
tSO0for$2tt^
PLUS f 4, TAX
CUP THIS AD &
MAO- TODAY TO
PEARSON PRESS
941 Esquimalt,
VictOfU, B.C.
Plea* Print
NAME.
ADDRESS.
POSTAL CODE.T^. W_
Please include cheque or money order
Allow 2 to 3 weeks for delivery
FOOD
772 Coldstream Ave.. Langford
AT WiSTBROOK SHOPPING CENTRE
P rio n M te c Mw AsiqmI 28, 23, 24
Open Weekdays 9 to 9, Sat, and Sun. 9-6
W> R — rvo tho
Rjgh^
Umtt OiMirtitlM
Frying Chicken
FiMh, Cut Up
or Whol* ID.
79
BACON
FLETCHER SLICED
5-lb. Box lb.
89
t
CLARK’S AAl
PEAS'i;i^ 3 l 89
I RUMPOR
SHELLBONE
. ROAST
GRADE A
lb.
1
59l
I
NALLErS 15-ox. Tin
POTATO SALAD
or BEAN SALAD
59
c
Pork Chops
NESTLE
MINI PUDDING A
AworMd 5-01.
SOFT DRINK
?UPor
PEPSI H. a]
til
00
Pin
mpuH
NALLErSTANQ
SALAD 3Z.«i.
DRESSING ^
81
jpi
FRESH JUICY
NAVEL .
ORANGES Z\
99^1
No. 1 MEDIUM
ONIONS 3i
21
5'|
CARNATION
2% EVAPORATED
MILK-
3 m
FRESHLOCAL y M 0%
LEnucEa 49
0
MDERSTVAIHETIES
C00KIB8
5-lb.
Box
/
Dtil; Coloniet Victoria^ B.C.. Sunday, Auguat 23^ 1976 y
Big salmon derby offers $12,000 in prizes
First pinze for the biggest
salmon caught during the
three day festival will be
$5,000- Total prize list will
offer $12,000, including a $500
prize for “biggest of the day/'
a daily $500 “hidden weight"
prize plus six daily $50 hidden
weight prizes.
Fishing will get underway
each day at 6 a m.
Festival headquartei’s will
he at the Clutesti Haven
marina in Port Alberni.
where Uie official we>gt>in
station will be located.
By 'JOHN HENDERSON
* Coloniit Corrstpontfsnl
PORT ALBERNI , — The
romniittee for the fifth annual
Port AJbemi Salmon Festival
scheduled for Sept. 4-6, has
.started its promotion for the
event in earnest.
The schedule, prize.s and
niles of the Deihy appeared
last week as part of a 40-page
supplement.
The supplement is being
sh^jped to other outlets on the
Island and the Lov\pr Main¬
land to attract out-of-tow-n fi¬
shermen to the big event, one
of B.C.'s richest.
..•
Trustees vote to merge
advance poll with city
NANADIO — Nanaimo ochool board will start preparing
sonn for an advance poll (or the Wl% school board aloctloDS,
to be held the tame day aa the advaaca poll for the city.
On a molioii by Trustee Oulseppe Multari, tbe board
has agreed that for the convenience of the voters, the polls
should be held at the same time. ^
\n dates have heen sot for the advance polls. Itchool
hoard rhsirmsD doe Klloer said nominations would open in
early Ordober. close in late November, sod the electloDS
would be held In early to mld-Dereinber.
The new China Oxek
marina, opened only last
rruxith. will also be available
for fishermen to launch and
keep their boats. Extra stall
will be available at both
marinas to assist in boat
launching.
Camping facilities are also
available at the China Creek
marina for out-oX-towncrs.
A Bavarian beer garden
and salmon barbecue will be
run daily at the Outcsi
marina by the local Wwanis
club, and two major drawn
will be held, one for a Hawai¬
ian vacation, the other for
$1,100 in cash prizes.
A fisherman’s breakfast"
will be sponsored few charity
on Saturday morning Sept. 4.
on a downtown parking lot.
Opening ceremonies (or the
festival, which will include a
vintage car parade and a fly¬
past by aircraft from the Ca¬
nadian Forces Base at
Comox. will take place at tlie
ClutesI marina at 6:30 on l*'ri-
day evening, Sept. 3.
The prize-awarding ceremo¬
nies will take place at the
Greenwood Motel, just a block
from the marina, at 4 p.m.
Monday. Sept. 6.
Last year more than 6,000
pounds of salmon was boated
during the fesiivai, with the
winning fish weighing in at 44
pounds, eight ounces. For the
last two years, the festival
has been blessed with good
weather for its participants.
The committee h^ies that this
luck will ^continue.
Noran home recipe
plan tokesoff ugly tat.
Picturesque Clutesi marina toill be headriuarters for event
>-JOhn HtOOvrvn pt>olo
The Naran Plan can help you lose pounds
of unsightly fat In your own home.
This home recipe weight-control plan is
easy to follow and costs little. Go to your
drug store md aik for the Nstm Reducing
Plan. The whole plan is included In every
package. The dirert Iom ire right on the
label. Pour the liQuid into a pint bottle
and add enough grapefruit juice to fill the
bottle. Take tm tablespoonstui twice t
di)^ needed. Take the vitamin supple-
mtn included end follow the low calorie
weekly tood rntnu.
Your first purchase should show you s
simple easy way to lose bulky fat and
help regain slender more rictful curves;
reducible pounds end inches of excess fat
should disappear from neck. chin. arms,
hips, abdomen, calves end aiAles. If you
are not completely satisfied with your first
purchase just return the empty oarton fw
your monn back. Follow this oaiy way
endorsed by many who have tried this plan
to help bring beck alluring curves end
graceful slenderness. Note how guickly
bleat disippeers. how much Mter you
fHl. More alive, youthful appearing
and active.
Parksville issue
Industrial park eyed|i
I
I
^onda NUMBER ONE
Parksvillt Mayor William
Kurtz has dacided that tha vil¬
lage should take a good look
at developing its Industrial
pailt in the near future.
The decision is something of
a reversal of Kurtz'a position,
since he said during last fall's
election thal there should he
no hurry in developing the fa-
cilitj'.
But a private developer has
offered to develop tbe
paik. and there ha.s been
preosure ffom other segments
d the community to so some¬
thing about the 140 acres of
rillage-owned land south of
Parksville, which the commu¬
nity plan designates as the
site of an industrial park.
Th? land Is "currently zoned
rural, and the regicmal di.s-
Irict ha.s refused to consider
the rezonlng of the i>rof>ert>'
until Uie village could come
up with some kind of water
system which could sene for
fire protection.
Kurtz now is suggesting
that a feasibility study should
be carried out for the indus¬
trial park. The study could
examine questions such as the
water supply, the size of tots,
and whether they should be
leased or sold.
"EVERYBODY’S DOING IT’ ..
STATION
WAGONS
The study would help Ihe
village determine which
('oune would be the wisese to
follCM' in develc^lng the indus¬
trial park, and how quickly it
could proceed, said Kurt/.
CAR CENTRE
I Dealer licencs Numbsf 646A.
909
Yates St.
386-6707
IN SMALL CAR SALES IN CANADA
and Hare’s Why...
nONT WHEEL MHVE EM IMMD HUaeiNi
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UtNES 1500 CC EMINE
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4 ae noon foh coaroiiTMLE entiuhge
COMPARE... take a HONDA Test Drive!
British %i]porters
SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE
SUITS ... SUITS
All from our regularstock of fine quality clothing.
REG. UP TO $325, NOW AT OUTSTANDING REDUCTIONS
DRESS SHIRTS
All pure cotton or poly cotton blends.
Vs to Vs off
SPORT JACKETS
An excellent selection of fine quality jackets.
20% to 50% off
TOP COATS
A fine variety of our reguiar
raincoats and topcoats
20%-50% off
ASSORTED TABLES OF *
SPORTSWEAR
AT EXCELLENT SAVINGS
SwMttrt, T-ahIrto, Sport Shirts, ate.
SLACKS
Wool worsteds, polyester and blends.
20% to 50% off
ONI RACK OP
LEISURE SUITS
(Shop eariy for this one)
Vs OFF
1 SH(;
lES to 50%
OFF j
May We Suggest That You Shop Early to Avoid Disappointment
British importers
NO EXCHANGES JL WEEKDAYS
NO PHONE ORDERS 631 YatOS at Broad till 5:30 p.m.
1120 PLEASE ALLOW 3 WEEKS FOR ALTERATIONS__ |
g ffiailg ColonijSt VictorU, B.C., Sunday, Auguit 22, 1976
Moscow bars rare and dreary
They cry in their beer
MOSCOW (UPI) - Pity the
poor beer drinker in the Sovi¬
et Union.
Not only does tlie 'quality of
the b^e^v leave a lot to be
desired, the beer halls and
beer bars are few and far be¬
tween, crowded, smelly and
decorated with unfriendly
signs, according to one devo¬
tee.
In a letter of complaint pub¬
lished in Moskovsky Kom-
somolctz, newspaper of the
Moscow branch of the Young
Communist League, the un-
haproP beer lover said he had
found a few drinking es¬
tablishments to his liking.
"But,” he said, "Moat of
them are just dirty bars
where you can smell the
nasty aroma of fish entrails
•scattered everywhere — on
tables, on wMowsills and
even on the fSoor."
The entrails presumably
come from the salted dried
fish and crayfish traditionally
served with beer here.
The letter writer, identified
only as an economist, said:
"An unimaginable number
of people manage to crowd
into a very small area and
while you drink the sour and
foamy liquid which they call
beer, you have only cme care
•— to keep your teeth safe
because in a crowd Uke that
it’s not hard to knock them
out with a glass of beer."
The writer said the other
"striking fact” about Mos-
cowr's beer halls and beer
bars w'as the number of signs
listing what Is forbidden.
"You cannot go there, you
cannot go here. Tliis is not
allowed ecetera. etcetera,"
he wrote. "Everything is'ei¬
ther forbidden or strictly for^
bidden."
The newspaper, which has
printed a number of milder
complaints frcmi beer
drinkers over the past five or
six >>ars, produced cimi-
ments from officials w*ho ta¬
citly acknowledged the criti¬
cisms.
They admitted Moscow has
only 79 beer halls, A5 beer
bars and 31 beer stalls for its
popuIatiOT of seven mUli(m.
although beer consumption is
steadily growing as one result
of a government campaign to
cut the consumption of vodka.
Shoppers snap up beer in
food stores so there is a
chronic shortage.
The officials promised more
and betteiNmaintained beer
drinking establishments and
increased supplies of beer to
shops.
Cold beer
,.. cheerless in Moscow
Three walks of life
may save a fourth
EL CAJON. Calif. (UPD —
Bartenders, barbers and cab-
drivers — who hear a lot
about other people's problems
r- will be trained as coun¬
sellors in an experiment fin¬
anced. with a $35,000 grant
from the State of California.
The Crisis House, a'family
counselling centre, is seeking
300 bartenders, hairdressers
and cabdrivers to take a two-
day crash cours^ in coun¬
selling so. they can better han¬
dle the problems that routine¬
ly come to them.
"The whole idea is to have
pecgile already hearing prob¬
lems of the public train^ to
more effectively handle
them," said Andy Thompson,
program director.
The trainees will spend two
days and one night learning
about the theoretical frame¬
work for human behavior, ef¬
fective listening and com¬
munication and die responsi¬
bility and role a helper.
Once a month for six
months they will be asked to
return for more training in
such matters as problem solv¬
ing, family systems and legal
responsibility.
The three vocations were
chosen, Thompson said, be¬
cause "they exist in an envi¬
ronment" that is conducive to
hearing personal problems.
Advertising
brings product
information
to you.
CANA'^IAM tOVERriSING ADVtSORY BOARD
Do you W2u\t
extra
money?
Laam to Prepare
IncotTM TPx Returns
Peoofewhohaveafiair for d«al*
tng with figurot. enjoy working
with the Dubitc. erxl would tike
to earn extra income may en¬
roll m HSR Block t Tax School.
There ia almost certain to be
a class near you. dob inter¬
views available tor best stu¬
dents- Send lor tree informa¬
tion and class schedules today
Ul IDOVI
ClaMM start 15th. Sapt.
Thera are two convenient
area clasa locationa.
Contact the office nearest you^
seesi
(Canada! Ud.
ISM DOUGLAS ST.
3SS-M12
Please send me tree informa¬
tion about your tax preparation
course I understand there la
no obligation
Address—
I City-
PfAx/inre
I Phrtno
^ CLIP AND MAIL TODAY
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QUEALE
(Sounds Ilka Quail)
You’ll be hearing more from us!
Queale Electronics is proud to announce the
opening of Victoria’s largest sight and sound
centre.
Whether you’re just starting an audio system or
a veteran Audiophile, you’ll enjoy casual, con¬
venient aelf-sarve shopping In the pleasant
surroundings of this “supermarket” of sound.
We stock the best brands of electronic hardware
made. Stereos, audio equipment, component
parts, CB transceivers, antennas, radios,
televisions, AV and VTR equipment. And our
people KNOW their products.
Drop In soon. We’re located at 1004 North Park
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the door.
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ELECTRONICS LTD
1004 NORTH PARK ST.-PHONE 388-6111
Victoria’s Sight and Sound Supermarket
IMPROVED
TRANSIT SERVKE
In Greater Victoria effective Sept. 3
Effective Friday September 3, there will be important changes to the transit system to
provide improved senrice for a large number of passengers in the Greater Victoria area.
The routes affected are 5 South Fairfield, 6 Lake Hill, 7 Outer Wharf, 8 Gorge, 9 Beacon
Hill, 10 Haultain, 23 EaquImaK, 19 Carey, 919 Carey and 930 Douglas. Departure times
for 3 Gonzales and 4 Mt Tdmle have been changed.
TheM changM are the raeuH of continuing studiM
oT the uw or the many routes, Including counts of
passengers at aelected times and points.
PaiUcutar study has bean given to loss of time
because o( lay-overs of buses in the downtown area.
Steps are being taken to reduce this lopt time, ths first
of which Is the Joining of some routes. 5 South Fair-
field has been linked with • B ea c on Hill. 8 Gorge
aivt 10 Haultain also have been linked. In addition to
reduction of time lost because of dty-centre lay¬
overs, larger buses can be used on some routes to
alleviate crowding.
South Fairfield' Beacon Hill will have an Im¬
proved frequency of service — every IS minutes
throughout the d^ at\d 30-minutes after 6 p.m. and
on Sundays and holidays.
6 Lake Hill and Haultaln-Gorge also will have a
15-minute frequetKy during the day, with continua¬
tion of the present 40-mlnuta service after 6 p.m. and
on Sundays and holidays.
For 6 Lake Hill and 23 Eaquimalt, morning and
evening rush-hour service will operate at 10-mlnuts
frequency to provide a regularity of operation not
previously available.
930 Douglas FsstBUS will have a change of route
In the James Bay area. It will leave downtown via
Douglas Street, then travel along Belleville, Govern¬
ment, Superior, Montreal and Niagara to Its terminus
on Oswego; Irion return north via Oswego, Superior
and Douglas to Its present route.
630 Dwuglae buses will operate at 15-mlnute Ire-
quency-throughout the day to 6 p.m., Monday to
^turday, with a bus every 30 minutes after 6 p.m.
and on Sundays and holidays.
With this change of routing to serve the western
section of the James Bay area, the 7 Outer Wharf
service will be discontinued. A few residents of the
western section now may have to walk up to two
blocks, but many more reskteixia will be much closer
to bus service, and all win benefit from the more
frequent service provided by the revised 930 Doug¬
las.
Connections with 26 Croaatown will continue to
be made at Btydon Exchange.
19 Carey terminus and transfer ^nt for connec¬
tions with 930 Douglae will be moved to Carey Road
at Tillicum. Direct connection with 930 stlB will be
made on both Inbound and outbound trips. 919
Carey FastBUS has had additional trips scheduled
to accommodate the increasing numbw of passen¬
gers travelling to and from the Legislative Buildings.
Realignmant of routes has mads nscsssary rslocatlon of sortts downtown boarding
points. Hate Is the liet of changes: JOHNSON
5 South Fairfield — board on Douglas, south of
Yates (by the Bank of Montreal).
6 Lake HIH —board on Yates, east of Douglas (by
Bktes).
8 Go^ — board on Yates, west of Douglas (by
Tunnel News).
10 Haultain — board on Douglas, south of Yates
(by Metropolitan Store).
930 Douglas FastBUS —4or Royal Oak (north¬
bound) board on Douglas, south of Yates (by Bank
of Montreal).
— for Lcrgislative Buildings (southbound) and
Outer Wharf area, board on D^las, south of
Yatea (by Metropolitan Store);%XCE^ after 6
p.m. arid Sundays and holidays board on Douglas,
north ol Yates (by Cross' Market).
All other boarding points in the dty centre area
are unchanged.
EVENINGS.
SUNDAYS
i HCXIOAYS
i
^1
3
930
8 12 16 22 23 24 25
6 IS 20
YATES
1
928
3
927
9
930
to
919
11
5
14
4
927
930
2
VIEW
A new timetable covering the entire system is now being prepared. Although larger than any
of the three present timetables, it win provide an added convenience because It includes all
routes. This timetable will be available before the end of August In the meantime, call
382-S1S1 for transit information.
aC HYDRO TRANSIT
Biology textbooks
By DOl’O 8MA1.T.
OTTAWA (CP> — MPs will
likely be asked to approve a
new set of rules to 8i>eed up
the operation of Parliament
this aulum&.afi well aa wayjL
of improving their chances of
putting private bills into law.
The house committee an
procedure and organization
will attempt to a ccvisensus
for such changes during meet-
li^ Sept. 20-23, ending a two-
year effort to reform parlia¬
mentary rules. The Cbmmons
resumes Oct. 12.
The 4dea behind proposed
reform is to more efficiently
organize the use of time in the
Commons and its committees.
&Atl^ CDl0ni0t Victoria. B.C., Sunday. August 22, 1976 ^
What do children
think about
elder generation?
• 'They have to have
canes."
Death plant
to close
>ni^N, Italy (Reuter) —
The Swhts-ow'Bed Icmesa
chemical factory at 8e\-eito.
where valve blowout spread a
cloud of poUoD last month,
will be closed permaoently,
Italian officials say.
The decision was taken by
regional authorltif-e and trade
union officials representing
the no employees at the fac¬
tory. 15 miles north of here.
VANCOUVER (CP) — Rep¬
resentatives of five B.C. Rail¬
way unions will meet with
railway management Wednes¬
day lo convince BCR to ,ioin
an appeal against an iiuiti-
Inflation Board rollback of the
BCR contract.
Bill Ferguson, general
chairman of the Canadian
Union of Ti-anaportatlon Em¬
ployees. said the unions have
decided to withhold job action
Stolen paintings
value Sii.vO.OOO
I/)NDON lUPIl -1 Thievps
broke into a commerical art
gallery and stole 10 paintings
valued at $550,000, polii-e
said. The moat \*aluable
was a fiainting of a brown
and while King Chailes
apaniel by fJeorge Stubbs, the
g^atest English animal
(»a^er of the 18th century. It
was priced at about $245,000.
BALTIMORE. NM.. (AP)
What do children know about
the elderly?
• "They have heart at¬
tacks at 90 and die."
• "They go lo church a
lot."
until the appeal is concluded
"Operations are normal and
we have assured the railway
that they will continue to be
normal," he said.
The union sert'ed 72-hour
strike notice two weeks ago in
response to the board rollback
the settlement negotiated
with the railway in January.
The workers had a first-
year increase of 16.09 per cent
reduced to 10.68 per cent and
a second-year increase of
10.79 jier cent cut back to 8.03
per cent, with neither in¬
creased to exceed $2,400 in
each year.
Ferguson said at the time
that the union had legal ad¬
vice that it no longer had a
legal or binding contract with
the railway because there was
no provision in the contract
for board approval.
However, he said the unj<nt
met later with the railway
and agreed to hold the strike
threat in abeyance jiending
the outcome of the appeal.
• "They talk funny."
irhose replies from chlidien
ar^ quoted in a new study
that reports children know lit¬
tle about elderly people and
dislike the idea of growing old
themselves.
The. study, covering 180
Maryland children aged three
to 11. was financed by the
American Association of Re¬
tired Persons and the Na¬
tional Retii'ed Teachers Asso¬
ciation. It was (^ducted by
hvo childhood specialists from
the University of Maryland,
Richard Jantz and Carol See-
fcldt.
Asked what they feel about
growing old. many of the chil¬
dren gave such answers as.
"My face will fee! crinkled,
my eyes will feel blurry”; or
"Sad because ITl be dying
soon, and I won’t have the fun
and joy I had when 1 was lit¬
tle."
A few said they ^uld led
"kinda happy." or 'Til still
probably fed like me,"
While the children de¬
scribed elderly people as sick
sad. ugly and bad. they said
also that the elderly are w'on-
derful, rich and friendly.
The report suggests that
schools might inti^uce chil¬
dren to a diversity of elderly
people so the children can
understand that the elderly
enjoys wide variety of activi¬
ties like swimming, tennis,
music and art.
B.C. Rail union
pressing award
branded as sexist
AUSTIN. Tex. fUPJt •
Women have complained thal
biology b(X)ka proposed for
Te.xas public schools are so
sexist that one use.s a male
figure for a drawing depicting
female ovaries.
"This i.s a very confusing
picture." said Berlyn Bock, a
member of the National Orga¬
nization of Women appearing
before the .state textbook com¬
mittee. "It might veiy well he
a picture of a transvcstile."
5Ls. Bock urged the commit¬
tee to demand the publisher
use more- representations of
women, especially in draw¬
ings deleting the female re-
producticxi system.
She was one of more than
too women and men who re¬
viewed r»roposed texts and
submitted critiques to the
fe.Ntbook committee.
The textbook committee
will vote on text.s to be used
in public school classitioms
and will spend more than
$32.1 million on the book.s
adopted.
Marjorie Randal, a CTlear
Lake City anthropologist,
urged the committee to reject
f'eology; The Paradox of
Earth and Man.
"This is a highly sexist,
imale chauvinist book," she
said. "If male dominance
were deeply entrenched in the
human biogram, it would not
need so many cultural props
and defences."
•She said the bo )k classified
women as baby machines and
argued that male dominance
wa.s an inherited trait in pri¬
mates.
Rcma I.Z5U Brown, a former
school teacher whf| now man¬
ages the Houston area Fe¬
minist Federal Credit Union,
protested what, she termed
sexist presentations of women
in the Ginn Intermediate Dic¬
tionary.
"While the male pictures
nm the gamut from tractor
driver to lunar module engi¬
neer. the female roles are the
traditional, trite stereo^rpes;
modeling clothes, for exam¬
ple. sunbonnet, .sari. Wmino,
lace headband, etc. to- cheer¬
leaders. drum majors and
.sw'itchlx»ard operators." she
said.
"I do not protest the presen¬
tation of women in the roles
of wife. homemaker or
mother. Rather I protest that
this is not the only role of
women today." Ms. Brown
said. "Most married women
are employed outside of the,
home and the number is in¬
creasing.”
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Store Honn Daily: 9:39 i.m. lo $:39 p.m. Thuri. and Fri. Shop 'til 9:00 p.m.
Meg turns 46 alone,
hut she *s used to that
Streamline la ivs proposed
Speed up work
MPs asked
THREE POINT
EATON’S'
/ \
Names in the News
TDNDON — rrlncMs Mar-
RarM celebrated her 46th
hiTlhday on her own Saturday
as she usually did even
before the breakdown of her
maiTiage to the Earl of Snow¬
den. The difference this year
was that friends did not have
In make excuses for them.
In the years of bickering
(hat preceded the legal sepa¬
ration of the couple last
March, Mends were always
odMtftcing reasons why he
was one place and she an-
ftther whenever there was
something happily married
couples would have wanted to
observe tfjgether.
The expectation now is that
there will be a divorce after
two years of separation, the
legal minimum for a plea of
ifTevoeahle breakdown of
marriage.
□
fORT I.AUDraDALE. Fla.
(UPI) -t- .Sonia Jacobs Under,
mother of two children, faces
the electric chair for her con¬
viction in the murders of a
Florida highway patrolman
and a Canadian constable.
If Mrs. Linder's death sen¬
tence is carried out, she
would become the first
woman ever executed in
Horida,. A number of other
women have been sentenced
to die but all sentences have
been commuted. Her sentence
will be automatically ap¬
pealed.
".She took it better than I
did." said Judge Daniel F»iteh
alter sentencing.
□
TOKYO Japanese Deputy
Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda
Satuiday urged Prime Min¬
ister "Dikeo Mild to resign as
the arrest of former transpor¬
tation minister Tomiaahiirfl
She^s 105 today
Victoria resident since 1900, Bridget Mai-y Morry
will celebrate her 105th birthday today with family
and friends. Born and married in Neivfoundland,
.Mi-s. Morry has been widowed for about 40 years.
Alert and a keen listener to newscasts, she is among
oldest members of Women of Moose. She had 10
children, five of whom are still living.
All parties favor at least
Some reform but officials say
It will be difficult to come up
with a package acceptable to
everyone.
Still, they are optimistic
some progress will be made
and the Government House
leader. Mitchell Sharp, says
he expects the committee will
have a report for the Com¬
mons this fall.
Sub-committees have al-
Datsun Sportruofc
Dalsun
2620 GOVERNMENT STREET atMilltid* Avwum • 38S.6737 • dt,
Sonia Linder
... took sentence well
Haahimoto, 75, swelled to
three the number of leaders
of ihe ruling Libera) party
charged with accepting bribes
in the l^ockheed affair.
□
NEW YORK British
actor Richard Burton and
model Susan Hunt were mar¬
ried in Arlington. Virginia,
^lurday and flew here for a
deception at the hole! where
they will live while he makes
a nw film. The bride is the
former wife of British racing
driver slames Hunt.
□
SPRINGFIELD, fll. - A 67-
year-old Skokie. III., woman
who said she was "just enjoy¬
ing everybody going up and
getting their money." won
Sl.fl01.776 in a state lottery. "I
Just can't lell you. I'm .fust so
shak>-." said hXHc Ahhink.
after her name was drawn. "I
have always been good to ev¬
erybody else, ao I hoped I
would get repaid. I guess I
did."
o
IJOS ANGEUJ^S — n«nny
Harwooil Mitchell. 22. has
been charged with stealing
$20,000 worth of art objects
from three cemeteries. Funer¬
al urns, jewelry, coins, stat¬
ues and other art oh.jects
were stolen from h'orest
I.jkwTi, (.ilendale and Cypress
and Hollywood memorial
parks.
□
DfTTROrr — A ballad about
the sinking of the ore carrier
Edmund Fitzgerald swith 29
crew in Lake Superior last
November 10 has become a
best-seller, amazing even Ca¬
nadian singer Gordon light-
foot who wrote the words and
music.
ready drafted a number of
reform proposals. One by Lib¬
eral MP John Reid (Kenora-
Rainy River) would do away
with the government's right to
decide when Parliament
meets, recesses and rises.
Instead, he proposes a regu¬
lar Commons work schedule
that would reduce the average
number of sitting days to 150
from about 180 a year. Every
sixth week the Commons
would recess, giving the MPs
a chance to cultivate their
constituencies or devote extra
time to committees. And ev¬
eryone would have two
months off in the summer.
The reduction would proba¬
bly have the effect of forcing
the government to (»^anize
its le^slative programs more
carefully and it would gke
MPs a better chaifce to plan
their own time.
It would also require
shorter debates. Reid
suggests that Commons
speeches now 40 minutes In
moat case* be reduced to
20 minutes. He also proposes
a ma.ior change in a con--
troversial rule that allows de¬
bate on legislation to he cut
short — so-called closure.
Reid’s sub-committee
suggests that any MP should
he given the chance to rise at
any time during debate and
isk for a vote on legislation
efore tl)e House. Currently,
it takes at least three days to
cut off debate as each of the
parliamentary stage bills
must pass before bectming
law. Additionally, it takes
three days to cut off debate
on any amendment introduced
at report stage, Just before
final passage.
Government officials say it
is highly unlikely the proce¬
dure committee will agree to
the proposal, largely because
it is heavily weight^ in favor
of the government. It would
allow any majority govern¬
ment a chance to force legis¬
lation through Ihe House far
moiy quickly than under
present rules, and is expected
to be sharply opposed by long¬
time parliamentarians cm the
committee.
There will likely be more
agreement on suggestions
from another subcommittee
led by Conservative MP
Marcel l^ambert (Edmonton
West) — aimed at making
Commons committees more
effective.
Currently, there are 26
standing committees, five of
which Include members of the
Senate. Special committees
are set up from time to time
to deal with specific issues.
Some MPs are assigned to
three or four different com¬
mittees and are consiantjy
tioing shuffled from one to an¬
other.
Lambert's group proposes a
new three-level system which
would include a general ex¬
penditures con^ttee wilh
p<nver to form sul>commiltee8
and invpstignie .spending pro¬
grams without Commons ap¬
proval.
His group also suggests re¬
ducing the number of commit-
iccs to 18 and cutting mem¬
bership to 14 from the current
average at 20 MPs.
And it proposes an end to
the practice of selecting com¬
mittee chairmen from the
ranks of strictly government
members.
Instead, chairmen would be
designated by the Commons
Speaker to various commit¬
tees and picked from a quali¬
fied panel of MPs from gov¬
ernment and Opposition.
The Ijimbert subcommittee
also suggests the4formation of
a committee that would deal
with non-controversial bills at
second reading, assuming
work now undertaken by the
Commons. This move would
free the Commons to spend
more time on ma.ior bills or In
general jxjlicy debate.
Finally, a thii-d subcommit¬
tee led by Liberal Gus Mac-
Farlane (Hamilton Mountain)
plans to propose steps that
would allow more bills spon¬
sored by private MPs to come
to a vote.
Most private members* bills
are discussed during the few
hours set aside each week for
such debate, then are put at
the bottom of a long list for
further debate without being
voted
Arts course
on cable
VANCOUVER (CP) ~ Stu¬
dents in parts of B.C. will be
able to fake the province’s
first television university
credit course this fall.
The University of British
Columbia will begin the
course. Fine Arts 125 — Pyra¬
mids to Picasso. Sept. 27 for
cablevision subscribers in
Vancouver, nearby Richmond,
and Vernon in the Okanagan.
The course consists of 45
half-hour telecasts, a course
manual and two textbooks. It
will include a telephone mes¬
sage service so students can
^sk the instructor questions.
Datsun B210 Hatchback
Dttsun-P-10 Wagon
7
•
$16 billion
project
crippled
MONTREAL (CP) — Om-
jitructkm on the massive
James Bay hydbmtoctrto
project has bem crippled as a
strUce by 10.000 Quebec elec¬
tricians spread across the
province, a union spolwsman
said.
Itie spc^cesman sak! all
electricians emplc^ed on the
SlO-Ullkm project and most
laborers had flovcn out ci the
area in a remote re^on of
northwestern Quebec and the
remainimt laborers would
leave 1^ today.
In addition, he said, the
3,000 heavy equipment opera*
tors employed on the site are
to vote today on whether to
accept contract offers. The
Project would close down
rompletly if they vote to join
the strike.
Quebec's <40.000 construction
laborers, affiliated ^th the
Confederation of National
Trade Unions, voted by a 70*
per-cent margin Friday to re¬
ject contract offers which
their union said %^‘ould create
a reservoir of “cheap labor"
in the construction industry.
The electricians, belongini;
to the Interprovincial Broth¬
erhood ot Electrical Wosicem
affiliated to the Quebec Fed¬
eration of Labor, started
walking off the job Thursday.
Union officials have said
that contract offers made to
the province’s 150,000 con¬
struction wwkers by the Asso¬
ciation Building Cnntrator*
of Quebec would turn the
clock baric 10 years in the in¬
dustry.
Tliey said that carpenters,
who now earn 31 cmta an
hour less than plumbers,
uould see the gap widened to
$1.22 an hour under the asso*
ciation's offers.
Hospital
holdout
organizing
Ihe Hdepital Emirioyees
Unicn is conAdent its third at¬
tempt at organizing 1150 em¬
ployees at St. Joseph’s Ifoepi-
tal in Comox will meet with
success.
St. Joseph’s la the only
major non-uni<m hospital in
the province.
union representatives
met last weric with employees
of the acute-care hospital end
an HEU spokesman said Sat¬
urday: “We are confident we
win have enough people
signed up by the end of this
week to make application tor
certification with the l.abor
RelatiCHis Board.”
The hospital administration
recently decided to join the
Hospital Labor Relations As-
socdatkai, which represents
the province’s major hospitals
in torgaining.
Formerly. St. Joseph’s Hos¬
pital En^iioyees Association
bargained directly with the
administration, but in light of
its new HLRA membership,
this is likely to end.
EATON’S
For the
Hard of Hearing
Unitron hearing aids
can help nerve deafness
and understanding. We
supply batteries at no
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Hearing Aid at Eaton’s.
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Dry danger stays
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Persistent dry conditions
tinue to hurt food-fvoducii^
areas in parts of northern
Hurr^, Australia. Brazil.
(?ana^ and the United States,
a federal survey said Thurs¬
day.
The Natknal Oceanic and
Atmo^hnic Administration
also said rain in July eased
drought conditions in southern
Europe. Australia, Braail,
•becoming a problem in some
parts of the United States.
NQAA's weather analyses
are compiled periodically
from space satellite data.
ground observation r^wrU
and government reporting
systems of numerous coun¬
tries.
The NQAA. an agency of
the U.S. commerce depart¬
ment, said July rainfall was
near or above normal in
much of France, Italy and
Spain, somewhat easing
drought conditions. Southern
Europe had been most severe¬
ly affected by the dryness.
However Britain, northern
Germany and &tndinavia
continued abnormally dry.
with southern England partic¬
ularly hsrd hit.
]Q COlOm0t Victoria, B.C, Sunday. August 22, 1976
Cut immigration report warns
OTTAWA (UPI) — Canada
must cut immigration, boost
technol(^ and hoard re¬
sources if it is to reach the
year 2000 in a healthy state,
the Science Council of Canada
warned the federal govern¬
ment in a recwt report.
The report said it was cru¬
cial Canada maintain a
slower pc^xilation growth than
during the last 25 years, A
population of 29 million waiuld
be preferable to the e:iq)ected
35 million by 20Q1.
The rep<Mt. released last
week, recommended specific
immigration quotas be creat¬
ed. They should "not be set
up solely to. tide the country
over short-term economic
developments.” and “tradi¬
tionally unpopular jobs
(should) be transformed to
^ become more attractive.
"Canadians should them¬
selves prepare to fill those
that remain, and not to count
on immigrants to do so.’‘*it
said.
During the early ISSO's im¬
migrants to Canada composed
about 65 per cent of the labor
force groNvth, but with a pre¬
dicted domestic growth rale
in the labor force of about
2d0.0(Xi people a year, the im¬
migrant contribution should
only be about 20 per cent by
the turn the century, the
report said.
It also urged all levels
govemn»ent to prevent urbah
communities from spreading
<xito good acgricultural land.
As Canada's population in¬
creases. "serious conflicts
arise between the use of land
for agricultural purposes and
its use for other development,
especially dtvelopment to ac¬
commodate our expanding
urban areas.”
Tlie report said the
country’s test land must be
used for agricultural purposes
only, and singled out Ontario
and Quebec as pri<Mdty areas.
It added, "Maintaining our
present level of (food) export.s
and assuring the needs of our
owT) population will not be
easy (In the future). We wilt
only succeed by slowing popu-
laticm growth, increasing our
production and cutting down
on waste — in consumption
and production.”
Canada is second only to
the United States in food ex-
Energy was the second
major concern for the future,
and in its energy prediction
the council said that by 1990
"there will be an enormous
gap between supply and de¬
mand. Thus, by the year 2001,
we may be dependent for en¬
ergy on polititically unstable
foreign suppliers. We need to
conserve our own e\'ai!able
supply.
"It shoud te treated ns a
critical and strategic national
resource, to be used <xily
when needed."
The council also recom¬
mended studies be initiated to
evaluate new energy re¬
sources suoh as solar and
geothermal energy, as well as
wind power.
"Denaonstratlon rejects
should be funded to their eco¬
nomic viatHlity and to es¬
timate the possible extent of
their future use." the report
said.
EATON'S
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F
"A
^ liaila Monist
Section 2
Sunday, Augui«t 22, 1976
Page 11
TERRY SPENCE
Award winning news.
C-FAX1070 NEWS
Slow learners^ school her project
By KING LKK
Colonltt R«port*r
A 26-ycar-olcl Viclorm
wtiman has turned a frustra¬
tion into a specialization.
Mamie She^ihei-dson. w1io is
expecting to receive a degree
in special education from the
I'niversUy of Vit^oiia in No¬
vember. is opening a private
school for (Jradc.s 1 to 7 stu¬
dents with learning problems.
She has found space in
Ouist Chui-ch Cathedral and
already hfs three student*
enrolled. She hopes to have at
least 10. the number she con¬
siders jierfect for personal at¬
tention.
During three years teaching
in the Terrace school district,
M.s. Shepherdson had a class
of 27 students in Hazelton.
Of the 27, she said. 10
wei*en’t coping vsith the r^u-
lar Grade ,2 and 3 vcoric. Five
or six of tlxKe were repeaters.
Her frustration came in rea¬
lizing that she u*as absolutely
incompetent in dealing with
those who needed the extra
help, so she decided to return
to UVic to specialize in that
aspect of education.
Her courses dealt mainly
with learning disabilities,
diagnosis and remedying of
learning disabilities, coun¬
selling and communication.
She now believe* *he can
offer something which, be¬
cause of the smaller class
number, cannot be matched
‘Stop being
schizophrenic
over Crystal’
By JIM (iIBSON
Celonht RCPorttr
A Victoria alderman Saturn
day called mi council to aban¬
don its schizophrenia on heri¬
tage buildings and do some-
tidng about the Crystal Gar¬
den.
‘ OouncU just passed a heri¬
tage protection bylaw forcing
private citizen* into preserv¬
ing building* yet we have a
city-owned heritage building
that some aldermen are talk¬
ing about tearing • down,” be
said.
It’s “schizophrenic,” he
added.
The major obstacle to reno-
vation of the Crj’slal Gerden.
according to Hayes, is financ¬
ing. Hayes, as the self-ap-
jxjinted saviour of the Crystal
on council “because n(i one
else will do it.” will petition
the province to allow a city
lottery with proceeds going to¬
ward restoring the 52-year-old
building as an arbca'etuni.
Hayes said overtures for fi¬
nancial support had already
been made to three federal
agencies — Heritage Canada,
the National Historic Sites
and MMiuments Board and
Canada
welcome
Throe Canadian Forces
ships based at Esquimau will
bo lx)st to a visit to Van¬
couver on Wednesday of two
.'soviet navy destroyers and a
Soviet tanker.
The host ships will be Pro¬
vider. Gatineau and Koo¬
tenay,
The visit is part of an ex-
<*hange that will send three
Canadian ships to Leningrad
in early October.
in the public school systems
in Greater Victoria.
Ms. Shepherdson plan* to
place major emphasis on:
• Reading, which she con¬
siders the key to all educa¬
tion.
• Math, teaching the basic
skills of addition, subtraction,
inulUplicatiun and division.
• Human development,
building of self confidence and
developing communication
skills.
Stressing that her school is
not a “free” school but will
have structured and individu¬
al timetables, she said stu¬
dents will also be encouraged
to develop in other fields such
as library work, sciences, cre¬
ative arts and physical educa¬
tion, if the child shows an in¬
terest in them.
Ooet will be $150 a month
for each student and Ms. She¬
pherdson said that her aim is
the National Museums Coiv
poration.
But Hayes, whose election
platform included saving the
Crystal, thinks more than evi¬
dence of partial financing
from the senior governments
was needed to sw^y council.
T think we’re probably
going to have to get public
support," he said, adding that
he would l^)proach the Hall¬
mark Society to establish a
Save the Crystal Committee.
Ibe Crystal was undergoing
a temporary reprieve wben
producers of David Copper-
field expressed interest in
using the Douglas Street
building in their filming (hat
was to have begun next
month. However, ti^ filming
date was moved ahead six
months and Hayes .said the
mechanics of saving the build¬
ing must now go into opera>
lion.
Inspired by the palm house
at Kew Gardens. England, the
Crystal Garden was essential
in the producers' choice of
Victoria for the movie. Repre¬
sentatives of the film com¬
pany apparently want a meet¬
ing with the city soon con¬
cerning the building’s future.
Canadian Pacific in
turned the building over to
the city wWch operated It as a
pool and dance hall until the
new Crystal pool opened in
1971. The Crystal Garden has
gat idle and in continuing dis¬
repair ever since.
Over tlie years renovation
schemes from arboretums to
dolphinarium* have been con¬
sidered along with proposul^t
to demolish the building to
make way for a convention or
transportation centre.
Last summer council ap¬
proved In principle renovation
at a capital cost of $1.5 mil¬
lion but a second look at es¬
timates last fall frightened off
council when they appeared to
be more than $2.5 million.
to help students return to the
regular school system after a
year or so of the intensive tu¬
toring.
She would like to work with
the “borderMne" cases but
woirid certainly accept the
more severe problem learn¬
ers.
If the number of students
surpasses 10, Ms. Shepherd-
son already has one or two
teachers lined up to help in
the school which will operate
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Iifon-
days to Fridays.
Hers will be the only full¬
time school for problem
learners in Greeter Victoria.
If parents don’t feel their
child is getting sufficient at¬
tention or is making satisfac¬
tory progress in a regular
school, they should look into
die extra help, Ms, Shepherd-
son said.
Some of the clues which she
says should tell whether their
child needs help are:
• If a student isn’t reading
fluently by Grade 3.
• H a student 1* really un¬
happy about attending achool.
• If a student is having
trouble witti math, not mas¬
tering multiplication tables by
Grades 3 or 4.
• If a student Isn’t up to
grade level.
• If a student seems to
lack self-confidence.
She urged parents to have
an eraluatlon of their child
done b>' the human resources
department If there was any
doubt and to have a talk with
her about the child.
Those wishing to learn more
about the^chocri, which will
be opening next month, can
phone Ms. Shei^erdson at
598-6293 or 592-4753.
iL
Flying higli
His method of fransjwrtalion is one upset in the
life of this T.oO-pound grizzly bear. After being
tianquillized. bear was flown 70 miles into bush from
a logging camp at Wakeman Sound, opposite north¬
ern Vancouver Island, afl'ei' becoming an unwanted
vi.sitor at garbage dump.
Saanich may seek longer tip hours
Saanich council’s public
works committee wants the
Capital Region to open
the Hartland Road dump
on Saturdays and statutory
holidays.
The committee will ask
council to request the region
board to extend hours of
operation because of indis¬
criminate dumping of gar¬
bage at weekends.
.^d. Fred Severson said res¬
idents living “in the line of
fire” are complaining about
foul-smelling garbage being
dumped cIom to their homes.
Cleanup of the mess was
undertaken by Saanich works
crews, he said, pointing out
that such cleanup was actual¬
ly the responsibility of the re¬
gion board.
“Our residents are being
harassed by people dumping
garbage when the dump is
dosed,” Severson said.
Meanwhile, the municipality
is gdng to spend $159,050 to
upgrade its garbage collection
equipment.
The w^rks committee ha*
agreed to recommend three
29<ubic-yard refuse packers
be bought from Suburban
Motors at a cost of $74,765 and
three side-loading refuse
packers from F and F Equip¬
ment Ltd., at a cost of $84,284.
The committee also en¬
dorsed a recommendation
from the munk:i^lit>''s equq>-
ment luurhase committee
•—CoIonM photo by AIm Bart*
Marnie Shepherdson
Youths complimented
Quick acts save man
An Esquimau man escaped
'with bunts, to his arm and
shoulder owing to the quick
reaction of two youths Satur¬
day morning.
Esquimau police credited
Lome MacNab. 19, of 867 Es¬
quimau. and Mark Bombezin.
18, of U57 Greenwood, with
saving the life of Gilbert Ha-
chey, 308^79 Esquimau,
whom they rescued from hia
burning mattress shortly after
2 a.m.
“It was good wxirk,” said a
police s 7 >okesman of the res¬
cue and the pair's firefighting
skill.
M a c N a b first became
aware of the fire when he
stepped outside his house
three doors aw’ay and smelled
smoke, which he pinpointed
as coming, from an apsurtment
window.
He and Bombezin ran up to
the fourth floor of the apart-
mentment block and asked an
uniderytlfied occupant who had
been watching television U
thera was a fire. The occu¬
pant said he didn’t know', but
when the bedroom door wa*
or.ened smoke p^Aired out.
They had some difficulty
rousing Hachey from the
•smouldering mattres.s which
later burat into flames. While
MacNab doused the fire witli
a fire hose from the hall.
Bombezin ran to a nearb>'
cabaret and called fire and
police departments.
Hachey was treated on the
spot for his bums.
Gorge housing
back on agenda
that the three packers now in
use should be sold by auction
next year, realizing a larger
return than if they were used
as trade-ins.
Last week, council voted to
spend $13,000 for a Gully
Sucker — equipment used to
clear onlchbasins. manholes
and drains.
Saanich council will hold a
special session Tuesday in an
attempt to clear the way for a
2 B0-unit apartment pro.ject f»n
the Gorge.
Council last week delayed
final reading of a land-use
contract bylaw until discus¬
sions were held with the de¬
velopers about waterfront
access.
'rX,
The developers, Victoria bu¬
sinessmen who call them¬
selves 76 Developments, plan
six four-storey buildings on
land now housing the San Se¬
bastian Motel and Victoria
Motor Gnirt.
They agreed to donate 40
feel along the waterfront be¬
tween the peninsula (Aran
Point) and the park, but only
a one-foot strtp along the rest
of the waterfront.
Council agreed the one-foot
strip was insufficient and
would block a promenade
being built there, similar to
other w'alks developed along
tile Gorge.
It was suggested council
discus* with the developers a
proposal for a six-foot prome¬
nade.
Municipal engineer Cliff
Warren said the one-foot strip
was designed to provide an
“anchor for the seawall.”
He was in agreement with
council that a wider strip
would have been preferable.
Robbery
charged
A 17-year-oId Victoria youth
is to appear in Victoria pro¬
vincial court Monday on a
charge of robberj* wiili vio¬
lence after a Cit>' Rollers
publicity man was beaten and
ix^bed early Saturday.
Police said Gerald Har¬
rison. 36, fiwn Scotland, was
attacked near the Douglas
Street bus depot at about 5
a.m. and robb^ of $167 in Ca¬
nadian funds as well as some
British money.
A police spokesman said a
youth was apprehended a
short time later in front of the
EImpress hotel and the money
was recovered.
Harrison, who was treated
for head cuts and released
frcmi hospital, had stayed be¬
hind when the Scottish rock
group left for a U.S. tour Fri¬
day after Its concert Thurs¬
day night In Memorial Arena.
$150,(M)0 ^satellite halV
Fireball for Royal Oak
will be started by spring
A start is expected next
spring on a $150,000 fireball to
serve the Royal Oak area of
Saanich.
To be built at Elk Lake
Drive and Royal Oak Avenue,
facing Elk Lake Drive, the
new hall will replace, the old
Elk Lake fireball on Hamster-
ly.
Architect* Orme and Levin¬
son of Victoria will have a
rough draft and model com¬
pleted next month for i>resen-
tatlon to council.
The 4,000-8quarr-foot hull
will be a two-bay structure
comparable in size with the
fireball at University of Vic¬
toria.
It will be a “satellite hall"
\vith a minimum d training
facilities and will have good
access in all directions by
main traffic arteries.
A spokesman for the archi¬
tects said the hall will be built
on a three-quarter-acre tract
of land. To acquire the prop¬
erty, Saanich made a swap
with the provincial govern¬
ment, receiving property on
Viewmont and Royal Oak Av¬
enue in exchange for property
at Glanford and Quadra. In
addition, the municipality also
acquired property <xi Elk
Lake Drive a private
resident.
The old fireball will be
closed and It* staff of one of¬
ficer and three men will take
over the new station.
The old flrehall has been in
operation for close to 30
years. It was built before Cen¬
tral ^ Saanich seceded from
Saanich to cover that north¬
ern part of the munic4>allty.
Garbage lugging
not for Saanich
— Colonist photo
This outmoded firehall will be replaced
Sidewalk garbage collection
wilt not be instituted in Saan¬
ich unless residents demand
and pass a referendum favor¬
ing it.
Giving this undertaking last
week, environment committee
chairman Aid. Roy Wootten
said he hoped this assurance
would set ratepayers’ minds
at rest.
"Sidewalk garbage collec¬
tion will not be instituted until
a referendum demanding It
has been passed,” Wootten
said.
His comments came in the
wake of letters to the commit¬
tee complaining about aspects
of the municipBllty's garbage
collection system.
Kathleen Bro%vn. 19(>1 Tay¬
lor. Victoria, stated her
strong disapproval of any
thought by a council to house¬
holders 'Tugging garbage
cans to the street.”
“If council had not raised
salaries perhaps the munici¬
pality could afford to hrve
things done im>perly,” she
suggested.
At a loss to explain reasons
for the woman’s concern.
Wootten hastened to assure
the committee that no such
action was contemplated by
council.
Saanich council next month
will review its policy- of twice-
monthly garbage a^cctlon
from households during
winter months. Summer cci-
lections arc made weekly.
i
]2 Ddllp Colonist Victona, B.C., Sunday. August 22, 1976
Wiis rusty reputation at fault?
Banks in rearguard action
Chrysler surses past Ford to stop daily-interest law
^ iv Tit# Fr*w Wayne McKay, spokesman the lowest balance during the
■y Tlw Cinatfian Prats
In the 1961 model year.
Chrysler Canada Ltd. has
such a tough time selling cart
that, in desperation, it ap¬
pealed to civic pride.
Billboards, bumper stickers
and other literature appeared
in Windsor, Ont. where Hie
company it located, proclahn-
mg:
“What Chrysler builds —
builds Windsor."
Now, 15 years later and hr
the first time since the
Depression 1930s, Chrysler
cars are outselling those of
Ford Motor Co. of Canada
Ltd., perennial No. 2 car
maker in Canada.
Of the so-called Big Four
auto makers, General Motors
ot Canada Ltd., is still the
leader, with American ^toto^s
(Canada) Ltd. a distant ^
fourth.
But the shift of the highly-
competitive market between
Chi^er and Ford has had
the industry buszing since it
began more than a year ago.
Many reasons are given for
the switch but the two most
acknowledge are Ford’s deci¬
sion to emphasize fuel econ¬
omy at the expense of style
changes, and Chrysler’s build¬
up of a strengthened dealer
organization that many de¬
scribe as unsurpassed in the
industry.
And then there's the prob*
lem of rust or. rather, the
way rust and Ford au¬
tomobiles have been connect¬
ed in the public mind.
In recent months. Ford has
been hurt by I'onsumer groufis
in Canada and the United
States who have launched
publicity and legal campaigns
.suggesting For^ rust faster
and worse than other cars.
Roy Bennett, president of
Ford, said his firm has been
branded the villain of the in¬
dustry without justification.
“Unqueatimably. wt have
luid more of a problem on
some of our oars than on
^‘ome of the facing competi¬
tive models,” he said. “At the
same time, there are other
CHI’S where we have had li
of a problem. So. you
compute a\'eraKes.'’
Meanwhile, statistics .show
Chrysler sales pulling ahead
of Ford at an accelerated
rate.
In July, Ford's sales
More winners on Chrysler assembly line
\ IMS
caml
dropped by 16.5 per cent from
the previous July to 15,776
units. Qirysler's July sales,
meanwhile rose another €.2
per cent to 18,841 cars.
For the first six months of
this year. Ford sold 96,965
cars, down 9.7 per cent from
the same 1975 period, while
Chrysler sold 117,884 cars for
a gain of 13 per cent.
In the combined market,.
Ford leads Chrysler by 156,721
vehicles to 144.552 units sold
in the first six months of this
year.
Chrysler's fortunes began to
change when the late Ron
Todgham took over as pres¬
ident. He used to run a dea¬
lership in. Chatham^ Ont. and
this experience gave him the
background he needed to re¬
vamp dte company’s dealer
network. Significantly, his
marketing specialist was C.
0. Syd Hurly, who succeeded
him as president last fall.
Chrysler’s product mix and
(quickness to )*edesign cars
added Impetus to the emerg¬
ing new network.
The classy intermediate-size
Cordoba was one example, as
was the introdui'tion last year
of the Vnlare and Aspen !»»
replace the aging Dart and
Valiant compacts.
Hurly recalls that the firm
didn’t panic when the industry
began to move heavily into
the small car field.
“There has been a great
deal written and said over the
past three or four years about
the small car. the subcoin-
pac4.’’ he said.
"Well, Chrysler didn’t come
out widt a subcompact in the
years jtist gone by because
our evaluatkm of the market
showed there was a much
greater potential in the inter¬
mediates."
Bennett describes the 1976
model year as one of little
Vancouver Trading Week
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Newmerk
NW Sprls
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Polysr Pr A
DOrtem
Potter
Proties
Renn Ind
I3'a
12 )
200 090 090 460 440
2l26t 432 422 030 - 2 432 320
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100 219 19 19 21 19
100 223 23 23 23 2046
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1200 20 20 20 30 10
7210 JIO 200 300 412 300 172
200 010 400 400 -S 012 400
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100 2Ma 64 64 - 4 toa 64
1900 472 472 ATS 422 6 300
10000 214'a UVi |4’a 164 144
>000 SI0'« 10. .104 4 4 HR •
too 07 07* tf no 16
2000 lOS 10S IQS 140 105
100 69'k 94 9'« 9'a 9'«
200 too 100 100 120 TS
000 47 39 AT TS 36
0775 302 290 3IS 4S 315 110
7000 II H 10 -2 tf 16
IM 1114 114 114 13 10
0202 tlS4 104 104 - 4 164 9'a
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3200 25 25 25 27 13
1200 40 00 40 40 32
2600 1204 20 « 204 - 't 24 II
700 tO^,
13200 27
63500 21
42067 51
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1000 12
4000 2
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100 122
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100 172
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400 620
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220
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Inti Shasta
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Keith Cop
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Leman Re
Lion Minas
Lou Mai
Luaarn MU
Lustra Gold
Mhria Mnis
Maml A
Mciaod
Mns Dorad
Mlnaar M
Munoat
Nanaiich
New Congs
Nilhan Ex
Nomad
Norco
N A Tech
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Olympian
Onaca Exp
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Phfico Ras
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change in styling or product!
for Ford.
He said the company con¬
centrated its energies on fuel
ewwiomy for small cars, a
step that was “well re¬
ceived."
“But we have not been as
<-ompefitive as we have in the
past in terms of having new
products to offer," he said.
“We were one or two years
out of phase with competi¬
tion."
As well, he said Ford »ars
were priced a little higher,
aftding "we probably went a
little further in trying to off¬
set our cost increases."
Bennett referred also to
what he described as the phe¬
nomenon of the switch by
many car buyers to trucks.
"We found an incredible in¬
crease in the number of his¬
torical car buyers who are
now buying pick-up^or vans."
This fall, Ford vriU be in¬
troducing some new or res¬
tyled intermediate small cars.
Jtogether with style changes on
other lines.
Nejct spring. Oirysler plans
to launch a new subcompact
which it says will come in
time for an expected shift to
the smaller car market
Chrysler dealert-'are happy
about the new trend.
Derek Simmortds, 48, man¬
ager of Dodge Ontario. Ltd.,
of Toronto, recalled the
Ouysler took a nosedive in
the 19508 and 1900s.
“But during that last few
years, we’ve put out a pretty
good product," said Sim-
monds, who has been selling
Chrysler products for 14
year!.
"I guess a lot of people
have just started to realize
it”
In a few weeks, battle lines
will be drawn over the issue
of bow banks and other finan¬
cial institutions calculate in¬
terest rates on savings ac¬
counts.
A hill requiring that these
rates be calculated on a daily
basis is scheduled to be in¬
troduced in Parliament this
fall as part of the new Bor¬
rowers and I.enders Protec¬
tion Act.
Most financial institutions
cuiTently pay interest twnce a
year, has^ on the minimum
monthly balance.
Banking spokesmen say the
administrative coat of doing it
on a daily basis would be loo
high. To break even, they
claim banks would have to
lower the rates on these ac¬
counts or increase service or
loan charges.
Rowland l^Yazee, president
of the Canadian Bankers’ As¬
sociation. said the public
would be wise to consider the
cost of calculating daily inter¬
est as opposed to benefits.
. .1 hope fnere are better
ways of achieving the govern¬
ment’s objectives.”
Financial institutirms that
pay daily interest on savings
accounts say the system is
not expensive.
Bill Caskenette. spokesman
for the Ontario Cr^it Union
I.eague. said the league has
been encouraging members to
switch to the daily interest
policy.
for . Vancouver City Savings,
the country’s largest credit
union, said his institution has
found that calculating daily
interest "is really a very sim¬
ple admimitrative c.xerclse.
"The banks are making a
great deal of noise about
something they don’t want to
do," he sakl. "... If wt can
do it at our size, certainly, the
hanks, with their massive sys¬
tems can do it."
A Toronto Star study in¬
dicated that Canada's hanks
are paying less than half the
advertised interest rate on
many savings defiosita.
The newspaper said this
was because of the way the
interest rate is calculated and
the fact that many i>eople
withdraw money each month,
leaving a smaller b"lsnce or
no balance at all.
Under the current system,
banks calculate interest on
month. This means that a per¬
son who has $1,000 in an ac¬
count for 29 days of^the month
hut withdraws it en the SOttj
day. would get no interest.
With daily calculation, ir^
tercst is paid for every dajj
..the money is deposited. *
A study by former IIBC eroil
noniics profeswir David Ron4
of the total amount of funds id
savings accounts and the totaf
interest banks paid for those
funds found “m-erwhefTning”
evidence'that bank.s were pay¬
ing less than half the adver-f
tised interest rate bev'ause of
the method used.
UIIIIIIIIBIIIIBIIIIIIIlllllg
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■umu. IU«)UaM.
PMtJe,, tic.
from Zi-l.lM Peoiilc
STARDUST
MS-IMI
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tTKATA DUPLIXM
LANaXOND t NDROONt
J.JLMINIAMM.
Qedit
lender
Se«vir>o Bni«h Columpa smet 1894
Am«ii m MccMs of $800 miHion
5-year Debentures.
Min. amount. S500
125 110
-OOP 210
22 1 lOH
122.053
30 UncKongAA
■XCHANOB
1971 ROLLS ROYCE
SILVER SHADOW
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A truly ImmaculAt* ind beautifully maintained luxury
automobile with following options:
• air conditioning • crulsa control • powar door
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ape
$28,000
MOTORS LTD.
760 JOHNSON ST.
(D-00244AO)
Interest paid Semi-annually. Monthly (Min. SSCKW)
or Compounded and paid al maturily
Intarsat paid Annually
Victoria: 752 A Fort St
(604) 388-6601
.Vancouver: 850 West Hastings St
(604) 681-5464
vyhite Rock: 1463 Johnston Rd.
(604) 531-7525
Vernon: 3105 — 34th Ave.
(604) 542-4377
Long distance call us ’icoHecI"
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Mamaaf Canada Dadoaif nauranro Corporsnon
Jim team.
More than just the scores.
Want authoritative background on that game the night bbtore? You'ii find it
each morning in the Dally Colonist.
Jim Tang has been Sports Editor here tor 32 years. And, along with his team of
sports writers and analysts, he's bringing you a wealth of experience. And
information.
It s the first section a lot of oeople turn to each day, and with good reason.
Donl Start the day wMiout it!
'«AacA. 46 Decitntw
total VOLUME THIS IWEEk
•7 Advenett, >09 Otciines.
3.030.SIR
39 Uechenged
2 966 724
106 UhCK6R09R
SPp Ixila (Kalenist
B
Co.lont0t victoria, B.C.. Sunday, August 22, 1976 '|^
Westcoast decision raises shares fuss
By UEORGE GIBSON
Cotoniit autintu
Westcoast, Petroleum Ltd. is
facinig criticism in some
quarters for what some say is
s quick change of policy with
regard to the payment of a
dividend on its pr^erred
shares.
Directors quite legally last
PERSONNEL MANAGER
with general managennenl experience and
MBA, age 30, living In Victoria, seeks challeng¬
ing position with local firm.
VICTORIA PRESS, dox 141
VICTORIA'S WATERFRONT DININO EXPERIENCE
640 MONTREAL ST. (BmW* Laural Point Condominiums)
BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCH
MONDAY TO FRIDAY, 12 to 2:S0
r l« DININO FPOM S:S0 (CLOSED SUNDAYS)
NATHINAl ENERGY BOARD
NOTICE OF HEARING
TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to the National Energy Board
Act and Regulations made thereunder, the ^ard has ordered a
hearing to be held In the Hearing Room ot the National Energy
Board. Room 940. Trebla Building, 473 Albert Street, In the City of
Ottawa, in the Province of Ontario, on Monday, tha 13th day of
Saptember, 1076 at tha hour of 9:30 a.m. local tima to hear:
(1) the applicatton of Union Carblda Canada Limited for a licenca
to export 47.412,000 barrels of reaidual fuel oil from
Petroaar's Sarnia refinery to Conaumers Power Company
during tha period 1 September 1977 to 31 August 198z;
(2) the application of Sun Oil Company Limited for a licence to
export 7.117,500 barrela per yev of heavy fi>el oil to tha
Detroit Edison Company during thd period 1 January 1977 to
10 April 1964; and,
(3) tha applications of Imperial Oil Limited to export.
(a) 7.MO.OOO barrels, comprising approximately 7.000,000
barrels of reeidiial^type energy steam and approximately
600,000 barrels of crude oil. from Its Edmonton refinery to
Exxon Company. U.8.A. (Cllffa Fuel Service Corporation)
during the period January 1677 to 31 December 1981. and
(b) 16.250,000 barrels, comprising approximately 16,725,000
barrels of residual-type energy stream and 1.526,000 bar¬
rels of crude oil. from its Edmonton refinery to Consumers
Power Company during the period 1 January 1077 to 31
Dacembar 1081
alt as more particularly described In the applications. Such
proceedings will be conducted in either of the two official
iengueges and simultaneous interpretation will be provided.
AND THE BOARD HAS FURTHER ORDERED THAT:
1. Any reepondent or Intervenor intending to oppose or Intervene
in the application’ shall file on or before the 3rd day of
September. 1976, with the Secretary of the Board, thirty (30)
copiea of a written statement, in either of the two official
lenguagee. containing hit reply or submission, together with
any supporting information, particulars or documents, which
shall include a concise statement of the facts from which the
nature of the reepondant's or intervenor’s Interest may be
determined, which may admit or deny any or all of the facta al¬
leged In the applicatione and which shall be endorsed with the
name and addreaa of the reepondent or intervenor or his
solicitor to whom communications may be sent. Any respon¬
dent or Intervenor shall. In addition, serve three (3) copies of
his reply or submission, and supporting information, par-
ticuiars or documents upon the Applicants end one (1) copy
each upon the Attomeye Qenerel of the provinces of British
Columbia. Alberta. Si^atchewan. Manitoba. Ontario and
Quebac; tha Energy Resources Conservation Board Of Alberta:
‘ I Gai * - . -
month voted to discontinue
the payment a cumulative
dividend at the end at the
year and in so doing sent a
ripple of concern through
some stockbrokers’ offices
and Ihi-ough some <rf their
clients.
Ttie company, when it was
formed five years ago (see
accompanying story) issued
$25 pai’ value convertible pre¬
ferred shares — but only to
shareholders of the common
stock of a predecessor com¬
pany.
The prospectus issued at
the time staled that payment
of the $1.50 annual dividend
would be made on a cumula- '
live basis only to Dec. 31,
1976, but NOT cumululive
thereafter. That means, ac¬
cording to some, that the
company’s obligation to pay
the dividend ends Dec. 31. but
they may or they may not pay
further ones on a non-cumula-
live basis after that date.
Now most companies, if
they’re doing well, usually do
keep on paying the dividend if
it’s on a non-cumulative basis
and they do so knowing that
they have a protective device
that allows them to pass chi
the dividend in times of ad¬
versity.
Last month. July 23 to be
exact, the directors of the
comi>any. meeting in Calgary,
concluded that it would be in¬
appropriate to continue the
payments after Dec. 31. and
announced the decision In a
press release.
The company stated that
the $2 million-plus it had been
paying out cacti year would
be redirected to its growing
oil and gas exploration anif
production activities.
The preferred shai'es. which
had been trading in the $18
□
range, dropped back to 514
overnight, which was twice
the v^ue of the company’s
common shares. Holders of
the preferreds can exchange
them for two common under
the stock's convertible fea¬
ture.
What has got some brokers
and shareholders to upset Is
that there have been few, if
any, oases where a company
has ended payment of a divi¬
dend when its fortunes have
been rising In so dramatic a
fashion as has Westcoast’s.
By then e^ain, there are
few such issues around like
the Westcoast preferreds,
with its limited cumulative
dividend lifespan. The usual
c-a.*ie is for the cumulative
aspect to last the whole tevm
of the issue.
Companies sometimes are
forced to waive a dividend
paymmt. Shares that have
Company president
replies to critics
and tha Oil and <
\ Conaarvation Board of Saskatchawan.
2. Any intaraatad party may axamlna a copy of tha applicatiorTa
and tha aubmiaalona filad tharawith at tha offica of:
National Enargy Board,
Trabla Bulding.
473 Albert Street.
Ottawa, Ontario.
K1A 0E5.
or at tha following addraaa aa for apacific appitcationa:
Union Carbide Canada Limited.
McCarthy 6 McCarthy,
Barriatars Sollcitore,
Toronto Dominion Bank Tower,
Toronto-Domlnlon Centra.
Toronto, Ontario.
Sun Oil Company Limited,
Tilley. Carson 6 Findlay.
44 King Stroat Waat.
Suita 2100.
Toronto. Ontario.
Imperial OH Limited.
Ill St. Clair Avanua Weal,
Toronto, Ontario.
.Westcoast Petroleum is
quite aware tliat its decision
to end payment of its pre¬
ferred share dividend is caus-
a ripple in some segments
the investment community.
Guilty cadets
now at 80
WEST POINT. N.Y. (UPT)
— The number of U.S. mili¬
tary academy cadets found
guilty of cheating reached 80
Thursday, or 40 per cent of
those charged thus far in the
scandal that has rocked the
school’s honor system after
202 ('.adete were implicated for
collaboration on a spiring
take-home assignment.
Team probes
Nazis in U.S.
TEL AVIV, Israel (VPl) ■
I The chief trial attorney for
1he U.S. naturalization and
i immigration service says a
i special learn of investigators
I is in Israel to pursue the
! cases of suspected Nazi wtir
j criminals living in the United
! States.
LUNCH
ROYAL
OLYMPIC
HOTEL
•41 JolmMll M4-11«7
Buffit
MofMtay-Baturday
day of August,
City of <
I, 1676.
NATIONAL ENERGY BOARD
Brian H. Whittia
Secretary
JAMES BAY IMN
270 aevwninMt . M4-71S1
DMLY LUNCH SKOAL
in our fine dining room
SMORGASBORD
ON FRIDAYS
OLYMUC
RESTAURANT
•MJohiwon m.trai
EXPRESS SKOAL
Soup or Salad,
1
75
LUNCH
could be
1976 PLYMOUTH ARROW
2-DOOR HATCHBACK
4 cylindsr, 4-spssd floorahift,
•Isotilc hNtsd rsar window, radio.
ENSIGN LE^SE!
1M1 YMm It CMk
386-2411
CHKYSLER
LEASING
CARS TRUCKS
“Yes, we've received letters
and yes. we're aware that the
IDA is holding meetings about
our decision," said B.H.
Laurence, of Calgary, the
company president. “And I
hear that ^ IDA have decid*
ed that we’re correct, too.”
Laurence defended the com¬
pany's action and explained
some of the reasons for it in a
telejrfione interview from his
Calgary office last week.
He i>aid that the company
could be accused of not pro
viding for the interests of its
shareholders of common stock
it it did not divert the money
from declining pipeline opera¬
tions to its oil and gas activi¬
ties.
“But I think it would be
worthwhile to go back five
years and examine how this
company was formed,’’
l^aurence said. “By paying
out alxxit $10 milliim in divi¬
dends over the five-year
period we feel we’ve’been ful¬
filling an obligation to the
original .shareholders and as
original shareholders, they
knew the terms of the Issue.”
Laurence said that the com¬
pany was Pwrned. in Sep¬
tember of 1971 by the amal¬
gamation of Western Pacific
Products and Crude Oil Pipe¬
lines Ltd. (Westpac) and
Westcoast Production Co. Ltd.
"Westpac conuTKMi share¬
holders were given one of the
new preferred shares for five
of the common they held.
Westpac shares were yielding
a 2^ent dividend on the
strength of iheir pipeline
throughput so for their five
shares they got a preferred
that yielded $1.50 instead of
the $1.25 that they ordinarily
would have received.” he ex¬
plained.
Westcoast Production com¬
mon shareholders, on the other
hand, were given comYnon
shares in the new Westcoast
Petroleum company on a
share-for-share basis at the
Market study:
same time, with no dividend
attached. Westcoast Petrole¬
um commtMi has never yield¬
ed a divideiKi.
Since then, the pipeline re¬
turns have been diminishing
and oil and gaa has been in¬
creasing.
“Our pipeline earnings
(which prenade the funda for
the preferred divldende) have
declined to about 30 per cent
of earnings and oil and gas
are providing about ,60 per
cent,” Laurence said, adding
that in another five years the
pipeline likely will be bringing
in (mly about 10 per cent.
l-aurence went on to say
tfiat it was only natural,
therefore, that holders of the
common shares should be put
into a better position to real¬
ize capital gains on the per¬
formance of ihelr stock.
The company president said
that he imagined that com¬
pany chairman Kelly Gibson
was misquoted in a Van¬
couver newspaper report of
July 31 when he suggested
that the dividend may be con¬
tinued after Dec. 31 if enough
holders of the preferred did
not convert their stock.
“We would have to have a
directors meetiitg to decide
something like that,”
Laurence said. He added that
there are no plans to pay divi-
dmds on the common ^ares,
either.
The major shareholder to
be affected by the decision, of
course, is Westcoast Trans¬
mission Co. Ltd. of Van¬
couver. whose chairman and
chief executive officer is the
same Kelly Gibson. It holds
600,000 or 44.8 per cent of the
1,338,938 outstanding pre¬
ferred shares and 2,017,560 or
50.1 per cent of the 4,025,130
outstanding common shares.
Eliminating the much-dis¬
cussed dividend, therefore,
wdll cost Westcoast lYansmis-
sion $900,000 annually in
Investment income.
People still count
TORONTO (OP) — A study
done by the Toronto Stock Ex¬
change indicates that institu¬
tions are growing in impor¬
tance in terms of dollar value
of trading but that individuals
still are significant partici¬
pants in the equity market.
For the period j^l. 1975 to
March. 1976, trading for indi¬
vidual investors comprised
77.29 per cent of all order*
and 48.59 per cem of the total
dollar value.
^Institutional investors were
responsible for considerably
#eww orders, 14.19 per cent of
the total. iHit nevertheiss ac¬
counted for 43.31 per cent of
the dollar value traded.“ said
' the study, made public Thurs¬
day.
Trading completed for trust
comparees. insurance firms
and corporations amounted to
WE BUY GUNS
iNTiRNAnONAL
574 YATES IT. 383 Z42Z
(acroM from tta Pott Oflioa)
1:21
^m^ilon. Jfof IYU3 JaW.
MORTGAGE INVESTMENTS
Provide •xcsilent ylald* tor your portfolio — We
have e good aetactlon of prime quality let
imortgages for your conalderatlon.
12 % - i 2 y 2 %
TO DISCUSS M0RT8A6EINVESTMEHT
384-8124 1000 GOVERNMENT 8T.
the cumulative feature are
those in which the issuing
company has to eventually
pay any missing or accrued
dividends. Those which are
non-cumulative can pass on
the payment and never have
to pay it
However. Westcoast ap¬
pears to be not In any finan-
<»al trouble. Esumngs rote 16
per cent in 1974. a further 24
per cent in 1975 (based on
'74 showing) and are up a fur¬
ther 49 per cent In the first
quarter of 1976.
Some are protesting^ the de¬
cision by writing letters to the
company, the stock exchanges
and the Investment Dealers’
Association of Canada (IDA).
The Pacific district council of
that body held a special meet¬
ing on the subject Aug. 4 and
the , matter was dJscussed
again at the regular meeting
last week*
However, neither David
Keane ot Vancouver, the dis¬
trict chairman, nor William
Leach, the Vancouver Island
chairman, would comment on
the result of the meetings,
aaying that the review is
going (m and results will be
forwarded to IDA head¬
quarters in Toronto for action.
Keane did say, however,
that the group was quite con¬
cerned about the image of the
securities industry.
$$$$$$$$$$$
^ MORTGAGE
* DIRECT ®
^ LENDERS ^
^ COMMERCIAL ^
^ RESIDENTIAL <
' ■-c
C also
e WANTED I
e licenced"
-realtors" i
CONTACT: * 1
^iTREVORMILSTED*^
* 388-9172 ^ ;
D©B©CI<
Lloyd &
otxrcerea cooounccncs
•rs phased to announce that they have
arranged to continua the practice ot
John H. Blinko
charMred accountant
at 4486A Weal Saanich Rd., Victoria, phone 479-2821
also at No. 3—110 Craig St., Duncan, phone 748-0386
Alcan Smsiters and Chemicals Ltd
^LCAN '
$$$$$$$$$$$
at our Aluminum Smoltor In Klllmat, B.C., wo
hovo oponinga tor
PRODUCTION WORKERS S6.SZ nr hour
WELDERS (Pit Ripilr-DPW 3) S6.8S par hour
THE JOB: is In one of the world's largest aluminum
smelters. Shift work and operation of specialized
mobile equipment la Involved. Welders should
have DPW 3 or equivalent.
THE LOCATION: Kitimat la a town of 13,500, located at
the head of a scenic coastal inlet. 400 air miles
north of Vancouver. Hiking, camping, salt and
fresh-water fishing and skiing are at our doorstep.
We have convenient shopping plazas, bus ser¬
vice, good schools and a fully accredited hospital,
nine churches and numerous service clubs and
youth groups. The climate is moderate. Snowfall
can be 220 inches a year.
THE COMPANY: offers a full range of benefit programs
Including medical, dental, disability and life in¬
surance plans. Vacation entitlement is two weeks
after one year's service and we have ten paid
statutory holidays. Relocation assistance is
available.
THE CANDIDATE: should have at least two years' ex¬
perience In heavy Industry and have a genuine
desire to fully participate In the activities of a fami¬
ly oriented community.
A Company representative wiH be in Victoria at the
Canada Manpower Centre on August 24,1976. Please
visit this office to arrange an Interview.
|LEASING|
1976 PINTO WAGON MPG
36-Montti N«t Lsass
Psr Month
(Plus tax, lioenoa and insurance)
Brown metallic. 2300 cc OHC engine, front disc
brakes, solid state Ignition, power steering, cut
pile carpet, mini console, fold-down rear seat,
flipper rear quarter windows, liftgate open warn¬
ing light, automatic transmission, white sidewall
tires. AM radio, wheel covers, underaeal. 12-
month, 12,000-mile factory warranty plus 12-
month, 12,000-mile extended power train war¬
ranty.
EXEinJTIVE CAR LEASE LTD.
1060 YATea ST., VICTORIA
384-1144
almost a quarter of the total
dollar value of tranaactions.
In the 12 months covered by
the atudy. 1.85 million order*
were completed on the ex¬
change worth $11.6 billion.
The study showed ttiat the
Tnajority of orders were under
$5,(ioo in value and “can be
assumed to have been execut¬
ed, in the main, for individu¬
als."
Order* placed ^ bank*
averaged $5,424 in value com¬
pared to $3,942 by individuals.
BEABUSYBODK
With a
B.C. Tel jager
you can be on
the move.
24 hours a day.
Your office simply
dials your personal
7digit number and your
pager beeps.
Get busy now, call us
at 388-8911 and ask about
our new, low rates.
Available in Greater Vancouver. Victoria. Prince George and Kamloops.
ANNUITIES
Immwcliatw Ufa annuitlat can b# bought with
lump sum* of capital or maturing
RagiataraC Ratlramanl Savings Plant.
Datarad annuitlaa can ba tx^ht with
monthly, quartarty. aaml-annual or annual
dapoalta. Thaaa can ba ragitiarad sa Ralira*
mant Savings Plana to taka advantaga of In-
ooma Tax Act provlalont k) raduca tax.
For Furthar information. caH. phona or writa.
H. J. F. ROSE
CMTf, aaTATi aamncia oiviwon
•^7 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE CO.
MS.1464 lOrOOouglaait S62-37M
]4 Dtill’ Coloniet Vii^oiu. B.C. Sunday, Aupiat 23, U76
Air fare increases not whole answer
Efficiency foremost says study
Winnipeg—Ha ivaii, nonstop
By FALL GESSELla
MONTREAL (CP) — Un-
pro\-ed efficiency must take
precedence 0 %'er fare in¬
creases in combatting North
American airlines’ financial
difficulties, says a compre¬
hensive study by the Intema-
Hcmal Civil Aviation Organisa¬
tion (ICAO).
Soaring coats and the result¬
ing airline deficits cannot be
overcome by continually ris¬
ing fares or traffic ^111 de¬
cline to dangeroualy low
levels, saya the recently-
.prepdred study.
.Already, the North Ameri¬
can air tranaport industry “is
characterized by a situation
of flow growth and a declin¬
ing share trf world traffic,"
says the study.
Tbe av’erage annual grosvth
^ rate of all International traffic
by North American operators
including mail, freight and
passengers — was 1.5 per
cent during 1971 to 1974. oonv
pared with the average of 14.7
per cent for all carriers of
other regions.
This resulted in Hhe North
American share of world traf¬
fic' declining to 26 per cent
from 34 per cent. Although
more recent figures are not
fully tabulated. in<kistrv of- .
ficials e.'cpcct the trend will
continue.
Compounding the airlines'
difficulties are rising fuel and
labor costs, which are not
being recovered through in¬
creased rates and fares, and
result in fares unaffordable to
many segments of the public.
The Montreal-based ICAO
expects farea^to contimie In¬
creasing until 1960 and then
plateau as 1985 approaches.
Efficiency measures recom-
rnended to improve financial
rerformances include merc¬
ers and route exchanges bet¬
ween airKnea, optimum use of
fuel - effieierrt aircraft, in¬
creased .stress on capital in-
BOND WEEK
veiling public has been denied
the fiiU benefit of knv cost hol¬
iday travel by charter opera¬
tors because of increased reg¬
ulation by government bodies.
The regulations resulted
from the massive flow of pas¬
sengers to charter f^erations
from the more expeastve ser¬
vices (rffered on scheduled
flights.
Attem{)ts by airlines to
con^te with charter opera¬
tors by offering special pro¬
motional fares were often un¬
economic ventures, the study
says.
International charier pas¬
senger traffic to and from
Nortii America was expected
to increase 8.3 per cent a year
from 1975 to I960 and 7.3 per
rent from 1980 to 198.5. S< he-
dulcd passenger traffic was
predicted to jump 6.8 i)er cent
from 1975 to 1980 and 6.4 i)er
< ent from 1960 to 1985.
Along with U)e cost to con¬
sumers of air travel, the
speed at which freight and
passengers can be proces5;ed
at customs and baggage
• hecks will become inci'eas-
ingly important in deciding
the future of international
traffic.
In the Ignited States, the
ratio of one <i)ntroI officer at
an international .airport for
each 60 aliens or 100 Ameri¬
cans was (considered loo km*.
Comparable figures were not
published for Canada.
WINNIPEG (CP) — CP Air
will inti'nduce non-stop DC-8
service to Honolulu from Win-
nii»cg beginning Dec. 12. the
aiiiine announced Thursday.
In a news reJefi.se, CP Air
said the eight-hour flight will
deyiari from Winnipeg at norm
every Sunday until Ar>rtl Ul.
wHh arrivals in Hawaii at 4
p.m. local time. Return Sights i
are scheduled for 7:te p.m.
local time each Saturday with
Winnipeg arrival at 7 a.m.
Sunday.
RESTAURANT FOR SALE
LOCATION ANO REPUTATION
This (Mtaurant tiM the two main ingradianta lor tuccaaa ... location
and raputattoni No laaaa to arranga-— you buy land, building* and
butmaaa! Ptu* mar# <* living accommodation (or owr>ar. Vendor will
carry approx 75% tmancmg This i* a rara opportunity at $149,300.
SCOniCENDREW
m-77«1 24 hra.
Empty seats spell trouble
JOFFRE MANOR
1121 ESQUIMALT ROAD
NOW OPEN
MON.-8AT., 1:30-4:30, 6:30-8:30
tCTtsive technologies to mini¬
mize rising labor costs and co¬
operative arrangem^s be¬
tween airlines on mainte¬
nance aervkee.
It was also necessary to in¬
crease load factors. In 1374.
the average passenger load
factor for all international
schedules ser\’ires of North
American airlines was 53 per
cent, while the weightl^d
factor was 48 per cent ^ ca¬
pacity.
A load factor of 46.5 per
cent Is considered the break¬
even point in the cost of a
flight.
“Thus, the margin of profi¬
tability was very small and
the fact is that throughout the
>*ear approximately half of all
capacity was umi.sed. ”
Although many of the
suggested efficiency measures
have been adopt^ by some
airlines, accelerated action
was necessary.
TTie study also says the tra-
ESTATE PROPERTY
FOR SALE
Land — Approximataly 104.96 acraa
on Viaduct Avanua naar Proapact Laka.
Offara will ba racaivad until Auguat 31,
1976. Tha HIghaat or any offar not
nacaaaarlly accaptad.
For furthor Information contact
THE CANADA TRUST COMPANY
650 Vlaw St victoria, B.C. 3t2-8111
6000 GALLON STEEL TANKS «
SUITABLE FOR WATER OR FUEL
STORAGE. MANHOLES TOP ANDI
BOTTOM (SIDE). HEIGHT 15’ —
DIAMETER 9’4". REPLACEMENT COST
$3500 EACH. WE HAVE 4 AVAILABLE AT |
$1500 EACH.
PRONE S9Z-3101 OR 478-6434
TOWN ft COUNTRY-SELL 2nd CAR
1.
Spacious one. two and threa-bedroom. Seclusion or
views. Separate lounge. R.R. workshop and exercise area
Convenient location.
$29,900 to $45,900
Call in and compara. CLARE BROCK In allandanca
Phona anytima SU-3321 or 592-2173
• 10 JACK MEARS OAK MY REALTY LTD.
Heavier trading arran house
^ A MODBRM CONDOMINIUM
COMPARE BEFORE YOU BUY, SEE
VISIT US IN
TORONTO (CP) — Price*
were slightly higher in fairly
heavy trading on the Canadi¬
an bond market this w'eek.
The short end of the market
was mostly unchanged while
mid-and long-term is.'iue*
were up about one-cpiarter of
a pofint. Provincials mse about
rme-gimrter of a point and
corporate issues gained about
one-half of a point.
A proposed lO-year
bond issue of the Province of
Sa.skatchewan has been in¬
creased in size to 175 million
(U.S.) from the $50 mHlion
ini-tially planned. The issue
will be priced Aug. 24. and the
proposed coigion is 8,75 per
rent.
A $25 million bond issue of
the Montreal Urban Commu-
Yields
ToeoNTO icei — s«iact*d pood
quolaliont tor Aug. 29 wittt oHaring-
ptic* ywids luMiiM by Dominion Sa-
(uritift Corporation Harm and Part-
nart Limitad.
■M Atli YiaM
CANADA
NT* n.m ;w
79» 79.7J S iS
a 60 «*<I9 *39
74 00 75 06 9 43
*7 30 *7 40 ISO
•3 2S 63 50 I SO
7*31 M.OI *32
70 M 71 00 * 23
^ Alla 7r« Oct. I5-0***I It 00 07.00 * 50
..SC. Eltc S Aug. Ift* 49.50 71.30 9 37
ManT t'M Aug. 3I 90-2 M 3S r.25 *13
N B. 7M Mar l•*4-«* 70 00 00 00 10 12
' Ntld 0'.-4 Sap ^a0■«3 *4 12 *5 12 9 74
• N.Sco. 7<.i Mar 1-0*-*l 7* 37 10 37 * 32
» Ont, S'* Apr 1341-03 74.00 77 00 *.|«
Onm 10'«May 31-aN 101.90 102.11 10.01
OntH O'a Sap 00.12 07.12 9.70
• Ou«H 0% Jty 3W*1-t| 01.01 09.00 10.04
« Sau 0 Mar 1-«M 70.30 77.)| f.43
MalTar Sap To-*t 07 J K ll * 01
. AltaGiT 114* Aug ) «S M».7S 104.30 lO.M
Aigsn H May )<*» 101.75 102 73 10 03
, Balir ♦"* Apr 1-9* *4 00 *7.00 10 22
^ ClftC *4* Jan 2.*5 100 75 101.25 *40
ContOi S^a Oct. 13^ 03.30 04.30 10.32
' OoUcp lO’aMay 13-95 103.30 103.50 10.44
• EatnAcc 10% Jan *5 *9 00 100 00 10.43
IntiNckI 1% Junt 04-1 04 00 00 00 10.20
Imptoil 9^4 Peb IV*9 *4.00 *7.00 10.11
• Meltlnd I'A No« 1-91 03 30 04.30 10 21
• Saagrm lO'a Juna *3 103 73 103.35 10.47
« TprEtnC lOApr 1 2000 *4 30 *3.30 1031
UnGa* 11% Sap 15-95 10375 igt 35 ig 7|
WttcTrtiwt l'2Apr *3 01.30 03.30 10.*3
nity ha.* been floated and re¬
ceived ft good response from
imestors. The issue matures
S^. 15. 1996. but is retracta¬
ble to Sept. 15. 1966.
Carrying a 10.75 [ter cent
coupon, it was priced at 99.25
per cent of par to yield 10.84
per cent to full maturity and
10.87 j»er cent to 1986. The
bonds are non-rcdeemable for
15 years.
Avon Financial Services
Canada Ltd. intends to float s
$20 million (U.S.) seven-year
note Issue bearing 9.25 per
cent on the European market.
Day-to-day ntonev- w'as
astdlable IMday at 8f» and
nine per cent.
The three-month treasury
bill yield eased slightly to S.O®
per cent from 9.12 per cent
last week while the yield on
six-month bills slipped to 9.03
per cent from 9,06 per cent.
A MODERN CONDOMINIUM
APARTMENT
. O'
943 Lodge Avenue is so convenient to bus tfiet you really
don't need m 2nd car.
• 3 bedrooms, large living room with fireplace.
• Kitchen with eating area plus pantry.
• New stucco, good furnace (3 yrs. old).
• Over 9.000 sq. ft. lot! Full price, only $49,500.
• Among new homes, good value here! MLS.
NORTHRIPGE TERRACE
ianigy Aggncics Ltd
CALL:
BRYON JEEVES
3«5-77ei 24 hr*.
477-6257 Rm. s-2i
7 July 1-77 t3
4''i Sapt. 143
y* Mar
4'; Oct. 19?
3 May 15-77
4 Fab 141
5-'4 Jan. l-il
. 5 Oct. l-W
OUR HOtTBM WILL BE ON DUTY WEIKDAYt
FROM 6.9 P.M., SAT. A SUN. 2-9 P.M.
545 RITHETST.
(One block from Dallas between
Menzies end South Turner)
s«s.563s 3$3-n24 2-B«drooffl
J. Fitttrer Building Ltd.
0 victoria Realty
nc ,CW Hone S(=H3*1J<IB UD#
CO
VICTORIA'S RESIDENTIAL
LAKE RESORT
HENDERSON REALTY LTD.
Mgmbftr of Werorta
Roal Estato Board
NEW STAFF
Ken Henderaon, prtaident of
Hendenofl Realty Ltd . Is pleased
tn announce that J. A. (BUDi
HUDSON has completed his re¬
quired Real Estate trainlnf and
has now moved from his position
as Insurance Manager into
residential sales.
The firm looks to "BUD " for
steady progress in his chosen field,
especially with young families who
are hard pressed th^ days to find
their first home. "BUD" would
like to remind new buyers and first
lime sellers that Henderson's is
VictoHa s only (iKLEN ACRES
agent and their S's'.* commission
for residential sales is a big pari of
keeping listings competitive in to¬
day's market
Trv him Inr vour next home tall
47« n49 or ;iK>-974l anvlime'
I-})
RENE BOURDIN
Mr. Norm Sawatiky. President of
Block Bros. Realty Ltd . is ple as ed
to announce that Mr. Rene Bourdin
of the Shelbourne Street Service
Centra has achieved the Salesman
nl the month award for the Block
Bros, iireater Victoria region for
the month of July. He attained Ihu
distinguished recognition through
dedicated service to bis clients and
his profession. ShouM you have
need of the kind of conscientious
service Kene offers, feet free to
call him at
477-1841
8L0CK 8R0S.
REALTY LTD.
High treed location with
Olympic views, just 10
minutes from downtown
Victoria.
20 New homes, In 16 dif¬
ferent models, still
available. Priced from
$70,700 to $79,700.
Follow the orange and
btack signs off Vanalman
Avenue to our
SHOW HOME
OPEN FOR
INSPECTION
3-9 p.m. WEEKDAYS
1-5 Km. sat..
AND SUN.
ENGINEERED HOMES LTD.
19 CADILLAC AVE.
385-6211
SHOW HOME
479-2611
Fine 2 year old custom built specious home. Over 1800
sq. ft. on main floor. Private boat dock. Adjacent lot
adds privacy and holding potential, and it Included in
the price of $135,000. MLS 19205
JOHNRORINSON 478-7041
8IU LEWIS 478-5818
478-5581 llg
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD. ^
^ SUITES ^
^Semhleti tMfftter
Dm* le »l«r aM.-Sa.. l:30-4;30 H«HPyt|
1665 Oak Bay Avanua
PRICED TO SELLO
In 0««p Cove on a lacluded acre zoned rural. You can
have a horsall Original house built In 1946 under VLA
apaciricatlons, a atoray and half, large dihing room. 2
badroomt up, 2 on tha main, one down, rac room, addi¬
tion about 4 years, is now a lovely living room with brick
(iraplace. Excellent family accommodation. $69,900
(MLS). To view call
Nava Pannia, 386-3M6.
3477 SAANICH ROAD/ TELEPHOC 386-3585 ANY TIME
TrrriiiiiiiiiiiiTiiiiiiii ri iiii
GALT HOUSE — 1320 ROCKLAND AVENUE
1006 fort St., victoria, b.c. 388-6424
•/
Designed by McClure, this im¬
posing reeldence preeentt en
exciting opportunity for the dis¬
criminating purchaser to live in
one of Victoria's finest buildings
end rent out the remainder of the
suites, of which there are ten in
total. With en sbundsnee of
firepiscee. panelling, beamed
ceilings and leaded windows,
eyery suite offers somethirtg dif¬
ferent In design end decor. The
building is Bitusted on '/k acre of
beautifully manicured grounds
and is offered for sale with va¬
cant poseeeeion at $295,000. For
an appointment to view this
magnificent properly, please
call:
DAVID BILLINGHAM
S98-1177 (Rgg.)
3225 ELDON PLACE
* , B*-
fc ^ J
''Ti'
94 UNITS
Excallant mix of bachalora. tinglas. twos snd thraaa
Bsautiful architact designed block showing good
return. Two years old and Immaciulate. Largs indoor
swimming pool, sauna and recreation room. There
are two elevators and covered parking. $2,1S0,0(X).
For further Information regarding this excellent
Investment and to view anytime, please call:
liSUE BONER 3W-a275/Pi|V 729 TERRY aWUEn
S98-166S S9SA171 66*4112
Canada Trust
1637 HiHilA
l-il
6664171
OAK BAY LUXURY 1 LEVEL TOWNHOUSE ^
FROM $78,000 B
VIEW BY APPOINTMENT ONLY ■
t!7 yittelR^ate^
Overlookina Beacon Hill Park S
Retirement amenitfes. sauna, swirlpool roof H
lounge, workshop. Leasehold Estate ■
1 6MnM kM 628.000 2 Isdrsw Inu 132.500
i^owcr
Oak Bay Propertiet Ltd.
592-2407
Vfcro/-ie s iMfffng
Con<^m/mum Brokart
S9ail; Colonist Victoru, B.C., Sunday. Auciut 22, 1376 ^ J
Pope asks Anglicans
to ban women priests
¥ ■
Davis slammed on Northland cut
MLA Lockstead demands meeting with Ottawa on subsidy
A demand that provincial
Transport Minister Jack
Davis meet with hi» federal
counterr>art to try to dissuade
Ottawa from cutting off sub¬
sidies to Northland Naviga-
ticxi Oo., was made at the
weekend by Mackenzie MLA
Don Lockstead.
Northland transports freight
and passengers to a string of
B.C. Mainland coastal com¬
munities and to the Queen
Charlotte Islands.
The New Democratic Party
MLA, his party’s transport
critic in the Legislature, said
Davis was “well aware” of
the danger of the 54 million
annual stri»idy being cut off
as the matter had been under
discussion when Davis was a
federal cabinet minister.
“Even after the federal gov¬
ernment extended the subsidy
temporarily last year, Mr.
Davis failed to put any pres¬
sure on Ottawa ter protect the
siibsidy and gmrantee service
to coastal communities.'’
Lockstead said in a press, re¬
lease.
■'ll appears that the govern¬
ment has no understanding of
bow vital this service is to
communities which have no
mad links with the Lower
Mainland.”
He noted that the provincial
government had sold the
steamer Prince George,
bought during the NDP ad¬
ministration, “which could
now have been brought into
service to replace the North¬
land ships if they have to be
stopped because of the lack of
a subsidy.”
Farmer, family
LINCOLN, ni. (UPI) — An
intruder killed a farmer, his
wife and one of their teen-age
daughters inside their mod¬
em, ranch-style home Thurs¬
day night and a young house
painter was charged Friday
with three counts of murder.
liockstead also said the
Queen of Prince Rupert of the
B.C. Ferries fleet, which trav¬
els between Kelsey Bey and
PiiiKe Rigiert, could be put
on a new route between Van¬
couver and coastal communi-
stabbed to death
Authorities said the victims
apparently were stabbed to
death while another daughter
and a friend who escaped
from the house tried frantical¬
ly to summcxi help. The vic¬
tims. one policeman said,
“were cut up.”
ties now served by Northland,
and the Queen of Surrey could
replace the Queen of Prince
Rupert on the Vancouver Is¬
land-Prince Rupert run.
He also suggested that the
Comox Queen, now being used
as a relief vessel, could be put
on a re^cnal run between
Ocean Falls, Bella Bella and
Bella Coola.
“What I am calling for is a
little imagination, a little
compassion and a little con¬
cern on the part of this gov¬
ernment and ‘ particularly on
the part of Jack Davis,”
Lockstead added.
“The Social Credit govern¬
ment seems to think coast¬
al B.C. as a pretty landscape
for the enjoyment of tourists
in the lounges of foreign-regis¬
tered luxury liners.
“They don’t realize that
there are people living there,
woridng there, trying to build
communities there. For these
people, coastal freight and
passenger service is essen¬
tial.”
Some of the communities
are in Lodeslead’s ridong.
Northland president Capt.
Louis Fleming said last week
the company ipay be forced
out of buBlnees by the federal
move.
Davis said last week he was
in consultation with the feder¬
al transport minister on the
subject.
VATICAN erry (ap)
The Vatican newspaper has
published a letter exchange
between Pope Paul and the
Archbidtop of Canterbury in
which the pope laments the
trend towa^ women priests
in the Anglican faith as an ob¬
stacle to unity between the
churches.
Archbishc^J Frederick Don¬
ald Coggan started the ex¬
change uith a letter dated
July 9. 1975, in which he asks
the pope for his views on the
movement within the Angli¬
can church “towaid the con¬
viction that there are no fun-
(iamental objections, in prin¬
ciple, to the priestly ordina-
tic«i of women.”
TTie archbishop expressed
concern over whether such a
trend would hinder progress
tesvard unity between the two
churches.
“To admit women to the
ministerial priesthood cannot
fall to introduce into this dia¬
logue (between the churches)
an clement of fcerious dif¬
ficulty which im those in¬
volved in the dialogue must
seriously take into account,”
the pope wrote.
The pope responded with a
letter dated Nov. .30. 1975, in
which he stated the Roman .
Catholic position that “it is ^
not admissible to ordain
women to the priesthood for
truly fundamental reasons.”
He cited the example of
Christ in choosing only men
as apostles and the constant
practice and teaching of the
church.
smooth local movltg orrangomoiits
Md export long-dlataoco sarvico
specializing In
DOMESTIC CONTAINER
SERVICE
RELIABLE TRANSFER
Writ# of phona for OF VICTORIA LTD
IrM bfochura; 400 * UniA LI U,
HItlaid* Ave.
388-6466
AGENTS
FOR
United \/nn Lines
OAK BAY-BEACH DRIVE
CONDOMINIUM
Attractive 2-badroom suite In this very desirable loca-'
tion. Spacious master bedroom with en suite. Well'
equipped kitchen with eating area, large sunny balcony. <
Pleasant view of sea and Mt. Baker. Underground park¬
ing. Quality concrete construction. Well priced at *
$65,900. Please call:
388-2111
MIKE McKENNA
592-3611
II MONTREAL TRUST
FINANCING
MORTGAGE
RATES
By Beacon Hill
Park
With panoramic views
You can live In luxury without “leaving
town" and with all the amenities, including
attractive financial arrangements. Maybe
choose our suite with an ocean view
balcony end move right In. En)oy the pool
or dry sauna. Appreciate the co-ordinated
appliances, two full-time managers,
security Intercom, underground parking,
and immediate ocdtpancy. (Adult
oriented)
• 2 Resident Menagers
• Fridge, stove, drapes
• Laundries on alternate floors
• 3 High-Speed Elevators
• Controlled Entry
• Underground Parking
• Pool, Sauna Baths
• Putting Green
• Bowling Green
• Vi Block to Beacon Hill Park
• 2 Blocks to Downtown
• Workshop
• Hydro Therapy — Swirl Pool
*^tate
by BILL WE8TCOTT
DANGER OF WRONG PRICING
since human nature Is
predictable, there Is a bet¬
ter than even chance that
you'll put the wrong sell¬
ing price on your home If
“you arrive at It youraelf.
You may price It far above
Ite fair market value
because of sentimental
attachment, expenditures
you have made, or by
heeding a well-meaning
friend's advice. A home
remaining on the market
lor months due to over-
prlclng, frequently
becomes a "White
Elephant.'' It eventually
sells tor a much lower
figure than It would have
brought originally — had
It been priced realistically.
On the other hand, you
might unoerprice because
of unfamlliarlty with the
local market. This would
be lintnclal folly. Your
safest bet Is to list your
homo with a Realtor who
will help you price It cor¬
rectly from the start and
sell It for the best profit.
Ptmw; SSi-77S1 24 hra.
We'/e here to holpl
q^owntown
CLARENCE HOUSE
All suites are comer and there are only four
sulfes per floor In this “SUPER" building of
cement and steel conetruction. Two complete
bathrooms, the best of appllancet, upright
retrlgerator-treezar, self-cleaning oven, extra
wall oven grill, dithwashsr, washer/dryer In
utility room In your own aulte. Decorated.
Double drapee. Panoramic views of the
ocean, mountains, and Beacon Hill Park from
this 8th floor suite. Two elavatori. Indoor
swimming pool, aauna, and swirlpool with
sliding glass doors to sun patios. Undercover
parking, the very beet electrical parking end
tire protection eystems, hot water heat. Roof¬
top patio. Quaat aultas and ratident
manager. Pricad at $79,0(X). MLS 19133.
Call:
KAREN BOHER
WIN DOUGLAE
VICTORIA'S LEADIN6 CONDOMINIUM BROKERS]
tReiver
ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF
^tlagc Oat^
"VILLAGE” LIVING
AT ITS’ FINEST
It's Just a one-block
walk from your new
home to the centre ol
''Village” life ... with
food store, travel
agents, banks, a
theatre, trust compiuiy.
Senior Citizens Centre,
hairdressers and a full
range of speciality
stores to cater to your
shopping needs. And
you’ll enjoy those
leisurely strolls to the
waterfront — just a few
minutes awsy. What a
fine location.
SUITES:
One Bedroom, S9T eg. h.
Priced from $42,000
Two Bedroorn, 1335 eg. It.
Priced from $69,000
Three Bedroom. 1604 eg. *.
Prl^ from $84,000
LUXURY CONDOMINIUMS
2125 OAK BAY AVE.
(CORNER OF YALE)
See it for yourself. That fine attention to detail
that makea ViUa^ Oaks a special place to live
— from the architect-designed reinforced con¬
crete construction to the attractive in-suite
designs and the full range of amenity areas in¬
cluding underground parking, hobby, laundry
and activity rooms.
OPEN TO VIEW MON.-SAT.
1:30 to 4:30
TRADE YOUR OAK BAY HOME
FOR ONE OF THESE
DESIRABLE SUITES
SPECIAL APPOINTMENTS
592-2407 ANYTIME
OAK BAY PROPERTIES
2227 OAK BAY AVE.
E aiiMiiiiw^
ePAGEJ
IHIflHIIIMIIMIRIRIIIMUIIIM
TO ■ C A L T 0 ■
N ITO MCAiTOb
I.C.I.
A. r LePage is noted nationally for its strength and ex¬
perience in the Investment, Commercial and Industrial
field—sales—project management—leasing, etc.
Now that the residential department is established suc¬
cessfully in Victoria, we are opening an ICl division to
handle among other things requests from our National
clients.
Competent ICl salespeople are invited to apply in con¬
fidence to
John Hicks—Res. 596-4781, Bus. 366-6331
If you’ve outlived
your home...
We’ll trade you!
Laurel Point Is ready for living; a guaranteed house-trade plan is only one of
the many ways we make it easy for you to enjoy living in Victoria's last resi¬
dential development on the Inner Hartiour. Make the move today, the time
Is right for this once-in-a-lifatime opportunity.
A unique opporlunliy lor the Investor Q combine year round living luxury
with tils tnvesinnent portfolio. This waterfront estate combines a iuxurioue
mein house with five apartments for Income and tax consideration. The es¬
tate includes 100 feet of the finest saltwater beach, a heated swimmirtg po^
for year-round enjoyment and the main resident designed for entertaining
end sophisticated living. Offered at $165.()00.
EVERGRSIM)LYMPtC REALH
106 E. on. npoli. WnUailN. 0.$.*.
(200) 202-7001
lAA
Lsural Point Prestign Condominiunis fsitm:
2 BEDROOMS
from $37,200
1 BEDROOM
from $28,000
STUDIO
from $22,100
OPEN 2-8 DAILY, 1-6 SAT. and 1-6 SUNDAY
COMMERCIAL BUILDING
3,600 sq. ft., block construction In excellent condition.
Close-In. Terrific exposure. Suit retail-wholesale or
professional use. Offers Invited to uking price ol
$200,000
ALAN U. POTTER
BROWN BR08.AGENCIE8LTD.
BLANSHARD STREET 3tB-S771 (onyttme)
1121 BLANBHARD STREET
1-21
• Unobstructed waterfront locatton
• Surrounded by a park
• Spectacular ocean and mountain views
• Choice of 37 outstanding floorplans
• Brick fireplaces and huge terraces with
barbecues ' \
• Magnificent landscaping with Garden Pavilllon
• The Harbour Club-a private
getaway tor Laurel Point residents only
• Pool and sauna
• 7 exclusive, architect-designed townhousea
S.CXX) square feet S155,000
• Afiartment condominiums, $S9,(XX}-$130,000
• Guaranteed House-Trade plan available
• Unique one-year buy-back guarantee EH
SUNDAYS
OPiN
Vwekdsys:
Wheksnds
1:00
8:00
itn
TOT
Z2S
Bwlsville
Street
Riofle
386-7752
OLYMPIC WATERFRONT
security — high-rise — concrete
SALES OmCE
Be. 2310
647 Mlekiiie
OPGhapd Hoose
PIWM3S2-S231
ir3S2-8232
BOB KEELING
Nawstead Realty Ltd. Is
most pleased to welcome
Bob Keeling, who has
Joined our rapidly growing
team of euccessful Real
Estate People.
Bob will be pleated to
hear from all of hit old
and new clients and
friends to discuss their
real estate needs, buying,
selling or mortgaging.
Call BOB at 366-8871 for
prompt professional Real
Estate expertise.
Nr
EWSTEAD
EALTY
LTD.
1637 FORT tT.
3200 QUADRA ST.
tAELUPAGEl
« ( i f I 1 t 110 ai.iio.
One of Canada's leading RealtorsI We are moving soon
to a larger office 2 doors down from our present loca¬
tion, enabling us to consider applications from succes¬
sful residential real estate salespeople.
A. E. LePag^ is owned 90% by Its employees—our
Coast-to-Coast referral system it second to none In
Canada plus we have many international affiliates. We
also offer the usual company benefits.
Apply in confidence to:
Rick Pettinger Residential Sales Manager
(Res. 478-9886) - (Bus. 386-6331)
or John Hicks, Regional Manager
(Res. 598-4781) — (Bus. 386-6331)
P.S. Co-operation and harmony are predominant
features in our office—ask our present staff.
ROWN
RO$. on
LAN$HARO
SD<ilj> Coianiat Victom, E.C, Sunday. August 32, 1976
Bottledosser jailed
PHilaADELPHIA (AP) — A
Philmdetphia mao who odinit*
tei throwing » Uguur bottle oi
IMtUburgh Ptmte outffriUer
gVl Oliver (hiring a National
laoague baaebali game ia«t
month haa been aentenced to
up to 60 daya In jail and two
years probation. The sentence
was handed out to George
Smith, SI. He had been
charged with recklesafy en¬
dangering another person and
posaesfeion of an offensive
weapon. The incident oc¬
curred July 24 during a game
at Veterans Sta^um between i
the Pirates and Philadelphia :
PhtUies.
The bottle was throww from
the centrefleld stands and .
narrowly missed Oliver. The '
Pirates left the field for a |
time and when they returned,
Oliver remained in the loc'ker-
room.
Bombers here today
Hopes still high
in Dolphin camp
According to coach I'Yank
Hindis **tiopss are high" in
the Victoria Dolphins camp.
The winless Dolphins girt a
big opportunity to snap tt>elr
kuing steak when tha host
w i n 1 e s s Vancouver Blue
Bombers In a Big Four Junior
Football League game at 6
p.m. tonight at Boyal Athletic
Pari(.
Hhxlle. who returned to the
Dolphins this year alter thi'ee
years ct running the Saanich
Hornets successful juvenile
operation, says he can never
remember having a losing
season and he doesn't want to
start
He is optimistic that the
Dolphins can turn the season
around with a win tonight and
get into the playotf picture.
Hindle expects the Blue
Bombers to be tough defen¬
sively. The Bombers have
scored only 12 points in three
games but have allowed otyk
38 and haVe lost twice by
points.
IDolphins have been
concentrating on improving
their pass blocking wid re¬
ceiving and their pass de¬
fence.
Hindle has moved quarter¬
back Rob Oowan to free safe¬
ty and Kym Clarke has
moved up to handle the signal
calling with Don Frenetic as
backup.
l^everal new playei's have
joined the team and will fill in
for Dolphin injured and centre
Jim Cutler has returned u>
the team.
Two city skaters
invited to camp
Vanessa Howe and Jeffrey
Mawle of Victoria have been
invited to attend a national
figure-skating training camp
in Vancouver.
The Victoria Racquet Club
pair are among 53 skaters in¬
vited to attend the Western
session at the University of
British Columbia next memth.
Another 59 skaters are at¬
tending a similar training
camp at the University of
Western Ontario.
Tat Babilonia and Randy
Gardner ot Lot AngeJes, the
U.S. champions and hfth-
ranked pair in the worid,
have been invited to attend
the Vancouver camp along
with their coach John Nicks.
/
Uplands golfer set
to defend crown
Aidon King of Uplands will
defend the low-net title in the
second annual Vancouver Is¬
land Seniors Golf Association
tournament at Cedar Hill Golf
aub.
Also in the field of X£d are
last year’s division winners.
Alex Wilson. Bill Zier, Hany
Tobin, Bob Tod, and Dr. Ray
Newlv but low-gross cham¬
pion Ray Harrington Isn’t en¬
tered.
The tournament gets under¬
way at 8 a..m.
I:0S c.m. — pr. Wm. Plso-
dtrKIth (UP). A. %. KlM (UP), t.
Gshsn (UP) .F. Unwin (UP).
1:07 a.m. — J. Macehtraen (GH).
D. Dannift (PC). W. Down (CH).
I:U a.m. — H. (.ainwatar (CH),
r TKc Ofiqinal KniqKf
Kscxunar tables
V^WlMnTeRihim
ealcutatad for tnla araa. tna baat
flmas for hunting and fishing for
tha naxt 41 hours will ba as follows
(Timas shown art Pacific Oaylllltt
timts):
A.M. P.M.
Minor Major Minor Major
TODAY
2:40 9:10 3:10 9:40
TOMOBROW
3:25 10:00 4:00 10:30
TUESDAY, AUGUST 24
4:15 10:00 5:00 11:20
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 20
5K)5 11:40 5:35
THURSDAY, AUGUST 26
5:50 12:10 6:20 13:40
mrDAY. AUGUST 37
6:50 1:05 7:20 1:40
8.4TURDAY, AUGUST 28
8;00 2:10 8:20 2:36
SUNIMV, AUGUST 29
8:50 3:05 9:13 3:40
MONDAY. AUGUST 80
9:55 4:00 10:10 4:30
TUESDAY, AUGUST 31
10:50 5:05 ~ 6:30
Maior periods, lasting t'/^ to t
hours, dark typt.
Minor pariods. shertar duration,
light tvoa.
Gilliam fined
on charges
NA.SHVILLE. Tenn. f AP) —
Joe Gilliam, a former pro
football quarterback, pleaded
guilty fMday in court to
charges of reckless driving,
carrying a weapon and a re¬
duced charge of possessing
marijuana. The judge recom¬
mended a fine of $25 on each
charge. 30 days 8usi>ended
•entcnce on the weapons
charge and 15 days suspended
aentence on tlic marijuana
charge.
Cntna Pilot
Education gots you
in tho air fact.
To «avo you timo
and
monoy.
656.4321
u.oo
VICTORIA
FLYING CLUB
J. Punahgn (CV), a. u. CrgIk
(APD).
S:3t g.m. — Dr. R. C. Nawtoy
(CH), A. Laland (GV), A. H.
Clarka (CH).
B:2S a.m. H. Andarson (GV),
A. Johnatn ($S), H. FonoiI (chL
H. larson (UP).
, Bias g.m. — a. Mgnchgsfgr (UF).
L. Mlilgr (CH). $. MoCulloch
(GAA), R. Cdia (ARD).
1:42 g.m. --W. Atharfon (CH), S.
^1:49 a.m. — H. Matthawa (RC),
C. agbcockjqM). a. Nappar (UP),
A. F. AmpW (CH).
_B:Ba a.m. — M. EUamas (ARD),
F. Norton (GM). E. W. Craig
(CH), F. Walton (GM).
9:03 a.m. — W. Latournarla
(UP), R. Hood (CH). G. Laird
(VIC), A. Wilson. (RC).
9:l0 a.m. — S. Swatnam (UP),
W. Ruffall (GV). J. Ingram (RC),
A. Powall (UP).
9:)7 a.m. — fc. Whaalar (CH). S.
Spaight (GM). R. Oawatd (GV). R.
AAaoaa (UP).
9:34 a.m. — T. MIIDgon (GV). A.
W. Smith (GM). R. AAcInnas (6l).
K. Ryan (GV).
9:31 a.m. — M. AAacLachian
(GM). C. E. AAcKaa (CH). G. 0.
•alnas (RC), J. B. Law (GV).
9:3B a.m. — L. Brookbank (GV),
R. J. Baliav (CH), J. Etmsiay
(ARD). O. Floyd (RC).
9:45 a.m. — D. MacPharson
(RC). R. B. Gaorga (GM), s. Cabla
(ARO), J. Gourlay (MB).
9:32 a.m. — A. Baarashaw (RC),
R. Bulier (RC). J. Andarson (GV),
T. Harpar (GM).
9:39 a.m. — 0. Lockhart (COM).
W. T. laaven (CH). R. 6 . Bonar
(VIC), K. Biakay (VIC).
10:04 a.m.^ — Dr. T. Allaster (N),
J. drown (GMi, C. Howorth (GM),
6. Arnott (CH).
10:13 a.m. — 0. Farguson (CH),
T. Colgata (RC), H. Oonaidaon
(GV), iT Fllmar (N).
10:20 — J. Mlltrath (GM). B.
Rogers (UP). 0. NIsbat ($S), B.
Oobton (N).
10:27 a.m. — D. Gibson (GV). J.
Carlow (GV). J. Johnson (RC). H.
Braoiey (S$).
10:34 a.m. » H. Thorburn (RC),
'?• Dr. D. Kays (SS).
J. 0. Padan (UP).
10:41 a.m. J. jaffray (SS). Q.
10:45 a.m. — D. SWharland
(CM), A. Chassar (n), 0. Davis
(COW). W. RIddall (uh.
I0:i5 a.m. — S. McFarland (CH),
A. Carr (N). H. Blchard CV),
M. E. Bailey (GM).
11:02 — W. Hewlett (GM). Rav.
H. Piiw (COW), N. Taylar (N). T.
Charles (GM).
11:09 a.m. — N. MeCaMum (CH).
G. Townahaitd (GM). H. Tobin
(GM), G. Kurtz (ARD).
1):16 am. x- L. Ohoemaker
(CH), C. Spears (ARO). A. Tadlia
(GM), M. Patriquin (CH).
11:» a.m. R. Shearer (GM),
B. Acres (RC), K. King (UP). E.
Salt (GM).
11:30 a.m. — D Bowen (UP). P.
Shannon (UP), W. Ziar (CH), B.
Leek (GREG).
11:37 a.m. W. Davaraeux
(GREG), c. Such (CH). R. Saiton
(GM), G. McMillan (UP).
)):44 a.m. .x w. Waddaiow (CH).
J. AIrrwnd (GREG), N. Footer
(GM.. J. Raid (CHI'.
KEY: (UP) Uplands: (CH)
Cedar Hill? (RC) Royal Colwood;
(CV) Gorge Vale: (ARD) Ard-
ntora; (SS) Salt Springs; (GM)
Gian Meadows: (GREG) Gragareh;
(ViC) Victoria; (MB) Mount Bren-
ton; (COM) COmex? (COW) Cow
iehan; (N) Nanaimo.
INSURANCE NOMINEE
An uotlltnt opportunity Mloto for on oiporioncod
Inturanco nomlnao to monago a buoy offleo. Wo ora
looking tor a prograatlvo Inouranco parson who
withaa to baooms Involvad with a largo flnandal In-
■Htution on a oatory and oxoallont bonoflta boilt. All
topllot In i trle t o a l oonfldonso.
Victoria Praaa, Box 137
CUBBON LUMBBR
I An establlohad Building Supply In Victoria, ra- |
quires exparlanced and mature Retail and
Contractor sales personnal, warehouse shippere |
I and yardmen to staff new Home Centre. Send
resume prior to August 2 m 1976 to:
Tom Dixon
Cubbon Building Supply
1720 Cook SL,
Victoria, a.C. VST 3P3
THE COAST TO COAST
M MANAGEMENT COURSE
In co-operation with Camosun College, the Cana¬
dian Institute of Management otters a four-year
evening course In Business Management. The suc¬
cessful student obtains the "C.I.M." designation—
recognized by government and Industry and
meeting the academic requirements for the Profes¬
sional Manager (P. Mgr.) designation. Transfer Is
possible to over 20 other course centres across
Canada.
Full year tuition fee-$135 plus texts (84 hours)
Phone or write for C.I.M. course brochure to:
Caitiocun Conoge, Buetneae Programmee
1960 Lenedowne Road, VIetorle VSP 5J2
Telephone: 802-1231 Local 214
Registration: at above address up to September 13
ACT NOW - ENROLMENT LIMITED
THE B.C. GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES’ UNKM
roquIrM a
STAFF REPRESENTATIVE
DUTIES:
To MBitt th« otfiCBrt. ttBwardB and mambarthip of tha B.C.
Oovammant Employaat' Union in tha day-to-day organization
and admlnlatra^ of local unions, mambarthip maatinga,
ratification votaa and alaotions.
To adviaa union offlcara regarding union policy and
prooadurat and to aaalet In tha mambarthip education
prooaaa. To procaaa gritvancas, handia oorraapondanca and
talaphona anquiriaa. To aaalat In tha praparation for nagotla-
tlona and In organizing campalgnt.
QUALIFICATIONS:
Conaidarabla.axparlanca in tha trada union movamant; ability
to deal with union offlcara and membara aa wall aa managa-
mant rapraaantatlvaa; ability to prepare oonciaa written
reporla.
Mrafarracb a knowladga of tha history of tha trada union mova¬
mant and of.tha B.C. Oovammant Employaat' Union; a
familiarity with public aarvic# unioniam.
Thia potilion wlH raqulra conaidarabla travai.
LOCATION:
Tha Buooaaaful applicant will work out of tha Union's Burnaby
offioa.
SALARY AND BENEFITS:
$1,502 par month plus fringa banaftt* In aocordanca with tha
Coliactiva Agraamant, and provision of a leaaad car.
WRITTEN APPLICATIONS TO:
Gtenaral Sacratary
B.C. Oovammant Employaaa' Union
4911 Canada Way
Burnaby. B.C.
V60 3W3
15. 157$
rB.C. TELEPHONE COMPANY
I®
^ MANA6EMENT INFORMATION^
^SERVICES PROGRAMMER/ ^
^ANALYSTS ANO PROBLEM ^
^ S0LVIN6 ANALYSTS ^
&
We have t number of positions open In
Vancouver for Individubis experlsnoed In
developing and Implementing solutions to
systems problems related to large scale
\xs*l commercial applications.
Successful applicants will be self-
motivating and buslnaes oriented wlfh
proven analytical and programming skills
coupled with a strong desire to work In a
results oriented project environment.
B.C. Telephone Company has a multi¬
computer Installation (Including dual IBM
370/1S8's under OS/MVT, DECaystam 1080
and DEC POP 11’a), and a large number of
Data Communications facilities. Those
Interested should apply In confldenca to:
Mr. B. V. Waalay
Employinant Managtr
B.C. Tatephone Company
768 Seymour Street
Vanoouver, g.C.
VSB IKS
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Fast Food & Specialty Rastaurant
A B.C. owned and operated chain
of restaurants requires an ex¬
perienced individual in the food
service Industry to manage an out¬
let in the Nanaimo area. An ability
to manage staff Is essential and
se:f-'nitlative and an aptitude in
developing new Ideas are an asset.
Please send resume to Box 133
c/o Victoria Press.
University of Victoria
Department of Chemistry
Ssiiloul Lsliontsry lattmcisrt
Applications ars Invitsd from qualilisd candidates tor ses¬
sional laboratory instructor positions avallabis from
Septembsr 1, 1976. to April 30, 1977.
DuUaa Include Instruction and co-ordination of under¬
graduate laboratory courses In first and second year
gsnsral or organk; chemistry.
QUALIFICATIONS: Minimum—B.Sc. Honours Chemistry
Preferred—M.Sc. Chemistry with rele¬
vant experience
SALARY $865.00 per month
Forward applications with curriculum vitas and names of
three references to:
Or. A. D. Kirk.
Professor and Chairman
Oapartmant of Chemistry
Unlvartity of Victoria
Victoria. B.C.. Canada V8W 2Y2
Telephone: 477-6911, Local 4472
General Librarian
Curriculum Laboratory
The University of Victorie LIbrery requires e Qenerel Librenen,
on e seeBionel eppolntment, ki the Curriculum Lsborstory which
•ervet feculty end etudente In the Feculty of Educetion. The ep¬
polntment will be on e full-time beeis from September 15.1976, to
April 30.1977, with s potilble leyoff over the Chrletmes end New
Yeer period.
The position Involves direct reference end orientetlon tervicee
to students end feculty st well as asBietenoe to the Educetion
LIbrerlen in procedure end policy formulation, ooliection develop¬
ment. end the 9 enerel operation of the facility. Beceuee of the
public service orientation of the position, there may be tome flex¬
ibility in hours worked. In order to relate service to demand,
although regular office hours within a thlrbipflve hour week will
normally prevail.
Appllcente mutt have profeeeionel quellficetions in
librerlanehip ae welt ee experienoe, training or Intereet in the field
of education. Knowledge of and experience with eudlovleuel
meterlele end equipment will be an eeeet Salary will be oommen-
aurete with quellfloctlone end experience.
Applloetione, with resume, should be directed to:
0. W. Helllwell.
University Librarian
University of Victoria
Victoria. B.C. V8W 2Y2
B.CJEL
PLANT PROTECTION
SUPERVISOR
Th« PMitlon:
Tha Individual In this position will be responsible for the in¬
dustrial fire protection procedures, equipment and
emergency crews, the aupervlelon of firtt-ald attendants
and tacllltlaa, the maintenance of plant security through
guarde and patrolmen, and tha co-ordinatlon of oil tplll
contiinmant procedures.
Th« IndIvIckMl;
The Ideal candidate will be either a present or past holder
of an Industrial "B" First Aid ticket or better. Supervisory
and training experience In addition to an industrial firs
protection background are also required.
The LeoaUon:
Harmac Division (pulp and lumber complex) near
Nanaimo.
The position will ba of Interest to those teaking an In¬
teresting and raaponslbla position. A compatltlva salary,
lull range of bansllts and opportunities for advancemsnt
will be provided.
Qualified tppileants should forward their resumes In¬
cluding education, experlenca and expected salary to:
J. C. Mordan
Plaoamant Officer
or 0. B. Smith
Induatrlel Relatlene Manager
Hermae Olvlalen
P.O. Box ISOS
Nanabne, BiC.
VSR SMS
AA
MacMillan Bloadal
REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL
First, Second and Third-year courses in Rest Estate Ap¬
praisal are offered this season under the sponsorship of the
Appraisal Institute of Canada.
Appraisal I Colnnieacet Oct. ith
Appraisal II Commences Oct. 6tk
Appraisal Ill Commences Oct. 7th
FEE FOR EACH COURSE $1U
PLUS COST OF TEXT
InformaUon regarding coat of registration and requirements
for accradltaUoa In the Appraisal Institute of Canada
available from:
J. B. SUELDRA&E, BJi.
Phoae 47S-70» 7SI Genevieve
VICTORIA, B.C., V8X 3R5
Appraisal Inttliute of Caaada (Victoria Chapter)
^ CONSULTING - ®
^ DEMAND ANALYSIS - ^
S
PLANNING
Are you attracted by tha challenga to lead tha
Innovative arm of the Demand anelyeit (unction
In our Corporate Planning area?
Initially you will guide tha department to greater
efficiency end Introduce the forecaster in the
held to ^ectiva new mathoda o( techniques.
Subsequently you will ensure the optional
Integration of forecasting and corporate
planning.
Wt need a top-notch Invaatigator; likely In
poBsesslon of an advanced degree In
Quantitative Analysis or Statlatica who la familiar
with large scale computere and with a knack for
ayatems design and programming. Ideally you
should have had exposure to urban land
economics. Above all you are e good
communicator and e team worker ready to
assums tha responsibility for a tTChnically
competent and highly motivated group of
analysti.
This la a Senior position In our Vancouver
Corporate Planning Office that otters an
sxcallant compensation package and the
opportunity for pereonal and career
development.
If you ere qualified and interested, please
forward your personal resume In confidence to:
Mr. g. V. Wsatey
Employment Manager
B.C. Telsphene Company
76S Seymour Street
Vancouver, B.C.
VSB 3K6
&
&
1075 West asergie Street,
Vanoouver, B.C.
vse 3RS
CHAUENGE
A career with the Governmertt of British Columbie
ThGM poiltiont aro opan to both ition and woirw.
PROVINCIAL SECRETARY
Rublld Servloo Cemmlaeien
PERSONNEL OFFICER
A ooriMltqnt within th« MBnagqmqnt 3«rvioM tXvwion (or ttnlor qx-
•eutlvq Qovornmont portonnoi to act in idviaory capaoKy to
Oaptrtmanial Paraonnal Offlcara and Managamant atatf raiavant to
organizational antlyala, job analyatt, aatabllahmant and oompanaation
plana: to makwraporta and racommartdationa.
QualWloadana Graduation from a Univaraity of racognizad atanding
m Biiainaaa Adminiatration or Commarca. prafarabiy with a major in in*
duatrlai Ratation»; oonaldarabia raiatad axparianca and knowladga of
organizational and oompanaation anatyaia Involving largo and multi*
facatad organization, prafarabiy pubHe aarvica; provan axparianca In
daating with aanlor axaoutivaa and managamant.
bbImv bti add ati add
Ouala C aiwpaMdan Na. TtiMIA Laoadani VICTORM
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
Medical torvloaa Cemml a eie n
PROGRAMMER ANALYST
To work indapandanity on computar projaota: to aludy. daaign and fully
documant computar raiatad applicationa ayatama: to program, taat and
oorract programi. and to provida fully aoourata oparallng Matruotlona.
QuaKftoattaiw — Oraduatlon from a univaraity of racognizad
tianding. prafarabiy with raiatad training or an aquivalant combination
of aducatlon. training and axparfanoa; ability to convart oomplax writtan
and oral mformatlon and inatruettona into data prooaaaing apaelfica-
tiona and documaniation; ability to carry out normal computar aystams
aludiaa.
Salary —> Il8.0t4-517,464. Laaaar quallhad applicanta may ba ap-
poiniad at a towar aalary.
Oum CampaStlan No. 76:1t66
Ctoainf LiaaSin — Mb paiMlani - VIOTOMIA
Claaint Data ^ taplambar 1.1S76.
Public Service
COMMISSION OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
544 MICHIGAN STREET. VICTORIA, B.C. V8S 1S3
Obtain and return appheattont at abova atJdrasa
V
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WITH VICTORIA’S FINEST USED CAR GUARANTEE
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Ddilp Coloniot victoria, B.C^ Sunday, Auguat iHi ISTS
j
National titlists, past champs
to play in Canadian Amateur
Kicks, Sounders
in clutch game
]Vlliui««ote. KJcka forward Ron Futoher, hIm scored the flr*t
gtaU in a S'O win, and Seattle Sounders defender Adrian
Webster get Invtrfved In a Mt of hand-holding during Satnr-
day night North American Soccer league action In
3Ilnneapolis. The win earned Kicks a date with San Jose,
3-0 quarter-final winners over Dallas. Toronto Metro-Croatla.
who edged Chicago 8-2, and Tampa Bay Rowdies, who ousted
New York Cosmos 8-1, meet in the other semi-final with the
winners clashing for the championship in Seattle’s Klogdome
on Aug. 38.
By JIM TANG
'Htree national champions,
Inchidmg the defending
champion, and five former
winners of the Canadian
men’s amateur golf cham¬
pionship are listed in the field
which will tee <rff at Royal
Colwood and Country Gub on
Wednesday morning in a
72-hole pursuit of the Earl
Grey Cup.
Defending is Jim Nelford, a
member of Vancouver’s
Marine Drive club who is a
meTrd>er of the Brigham
Young University team.
Nelford, who won the 1S75
B.C. championship at the
Nanaimo Golf Cub but was
unable to play (xi the Willing-
don Cup team because of a
European tour by his college
team, came back to win tlie
Canadian title at the lUver-
side Country Club in St John.
He was unaMe to defend the
B.C. championship this year,
but 1976 vklxnles came in the
Pan-American and Western
Intercollegiate tournaments.
Expected to be among the
main challengers are South
Africa’s Gavin Levenson and
Juan Estrada, four-time Mex¬
ican chafhpion.
The 22-year-old Levenson, a
member of the Kensington
club in Transvaal, won the
South African Champion last
year and played for his
country in the Comntonwealth
matches. Ha was selected to
South Africa’s Eisenhower
Cup team riiis year and re¬
cently qualified to play in the
U.S. Amateur championship.
Estrada’s record indicates
he is the top amateur golfer
in his country. He won the
Mexican championship in
1967, 1966. 1960 and 1976; he
was a member ci the Mexican
team in the world amateur in
1960,'1962. 1964, 1966 and 196$;
he played in the Masters tour¬
nament in 1961, 1962 and 1963.
and he was a member of the
Mexican Americans Cup team
in 1964, 1956, 195$, 1960. 1961,
1963,1966 and 1967.
Eskimos taste own medicine
EDMONTON — Edmont<xi TTw Grey Cup champions, sons, were edged out 20-18 by
Eskimos learned something who had won 15 of 16 games Ottawa Rough Riders when
about the other side of the decided in the last three min- Gerry Organ kicked a last-
coin on Saturday ni^t. utes during the past two sea- second 47-yard field goal.
Burrards win opener
NEW WESTMINSTER. (CP
— \'aooouver Burrmrd defeat-
•4 New WeetnUoster SaJmon-
bcttles. B-8, In the first game
of the Western Lacrosee Aaso-
clatioa beet-of-sev'ea final
aeries before 1876 fans Satur¬
day Digbt.
Second game of the beat-of-
ae>'en seriea wll} be played
Monday in Richmond with the
third game aet for New Weet-
mioster on Thursday.
The Salmonbellles. who
hadn’t pla>*ed in nine daj-a,
ap|>eared flat against Bur¬
rards, fresh from victory over
Mcloria Shamrocks In a beat-
<rf-aeven iiemi-Ilnal series.
New Westminster outsbot
Vancouver 51-43, bat the sbota
were directed mainly at Bur¬
rards goaltender Dave Evans.
Junior player Rico Bellusci
acored twice for Burrards, as
did Dave Tasker and Ward
Sanderson. Bob Holmes, BUI
Foote and Takl Vohaiis acored
the other Vancouver goals.
Brian Tasker, Dave Matbe-
son and Wayne Goes scored
twice each for Salmonbellles
with singles each going to Jim
Johnston, and Chuck .Med-
hurst.
Defeat, which came before
a sell-out crowd of 26,882,
came after the Riders ap¬
peared to have blown their
chances several times with
stupid play. It denied the Es¬
kimos a first-place tie in the
Western Football Conference
and moved the Riders four
points ahead in the Eastern
Conference.
blew another chance. This
time they got within 28 yards,
were thrown back to the Ed¬
monton 36 and got only to
17-15 when Organ was wide
with a field-goal try.
Riders then helped set up a
22-yard field goal by Cutler
with a rou^iqilay penalty^
taken after a successful pakfir
That left them with a minute
and 40 seconds in which to do
something about the 17-18 def¬
icit.
It appeared for 25 minutes
as if the Eskimos were going
to wipe out the memories of
having allowed 70 points in
their last two games.
Major league baseball
iMtsra Ofvltios
W L Pet. OIL
Nr# York 77 V MS —
•alttmoro A3 ^ .531 10
Cl«v«land 59 43 .4M 14
K 'roit 54 43 .479 15
ston 57 43 .475 14
Mllw«uk40 53 44 .453 tSW
NATIONAL LIAOUl
•srioni DIvWm
W L Pet. OOL
PhllocMptila 79 41 .458 —
Pittlburph 46 55 .550 13t^
N4 w York 62 41 .504 IIV9
Chicoeo M 44 .4tt 2$
St. LojN 53 M id 34
Montretl 41 K .353 34
WMttm DivNtM
W L Pet. OSL
Konus City 74 47 A12 ~
Mktend 45 57 .fiS 9V9
MlnrwMto 41 42 in 14
ttMM 54 44 475
^lc«go 53 49 .434 31
CAlIfornio 53 70 .431 22
CIncInrwti
Lot AngtM
Son 01400
Moulton
Atlonta
San Fronclico
Waattni DIvMm
W L Pet. OiL
79 45 .437 —
64 54 .557 10
65 440 \r/a
■ .474 "
.440
.432
57
•9 .«■
44 .4}
S .44
71 .43
Quarterback smartly by
\-eteran Tom Wilkinson, who
completed his first U passes,
seven of therp to Don War-
inngtixi, they moved into a
14-3 lead toy the sixth minute
ol the second quarter. They
appeared to be in full control
although Organ did cut the
lead to 15-9 before the inter-
missicxi .with the sectxid and
third d his four field goals,
the third one coming £r^ 51
yards.
However, Wilkinson injured
an elbow in the third quarter
and the Edmcsiton attack
bogged down a bit. The
Riders made a voluntary
quarteiback change, bringing
in exciting OoiKlredge Holkv
way for Tom Qemenls, and
Holloway just mani^ed to
overcome a rash of errors.
Holloway got them within 35
yards with about 30 seconds
remadning. then the Riders
took two successive five-yard
penalties for illegal procedure
to practically put Organ
out of field-goal range, llwy
followed that with a gamble
against time cn a running
play. Art Green got them six
yards, and Organ beat the
clock by a second with the
winning kick.
WESTIRN CONPIRtNCI
P W L T P A Ph.
Sask. 4 5 I 0 113 71 10
Edmonton 6 4 3 0 117 144 4
B.C. Ltora 5 3 2 0 94 91 4
Winnipoa 5 1 4 0 134 114 3
Caleary 5 0 4 i 47 144 l
■ASTERN CONPERINCi
P W L T P API*.
OttavM 4 5 1 0 1SI IIS 10
Toronto 5 3 2 o 95 19 4
Atentraol | 1 3 1 74 117 3
Namllten 5 1 4 0 41 130 2
N«xt fltmt: Monday—Toronto ri
**-*-»a1.
vnivovv WM VW Wl—M V
May. Paoan <41, Martlnaz (4),
Hoiswortn (4), Millar (4), Cuaiiar
4-13 (9) and Dampaty; jonnaon.
Naw York
San Oiaoo . . .
Koosman 14-7 and Grotat GrI
001 too 401— 7 N 1
000 001 000 - 1 4 1
• - -- ‘ ’min
F^atar (3), Jatfaraon (3), Carrtrii
(7). Hamilton 5-5 (9) and Eulan.
Horn# run*— Sattlmora. OaCInca*
'7tM; Bumbry (4tb}. Chicago, Bro-
wmar (7th).
Miiwaukae 010 001 OOO— I . .
Patiin 4-10. HaH (t), LIttall (8)
and $tin»on; Colbern 7-13, SadackI
(4). Castro (9) and Portar .Homa
run—MHwaukaa, Joshua (4th).
Montreal
00000004>0000000-4 U 2
San Francisco
100 001 003 000 000 1— 5 II 1
rs. Taylor (71, Murray (9).
(in, Dunning (13), Lang
. . _ and Carter; D'Acquisto,
Wllltams (7), LavaOa (4), Haavarlo
on, Moffltt (13), Dressier 04 (14)
and Radar. Home run—Marcar
(I7ih).
Karri
loears,
rrnan i
(15) i
Oakland lOO 000 001— 3 7 0
Boston 010 30t Olx— 5 9 0
Sosman 4-1, Bahnsan (5), Llndb-
iad (4) and Nanay, Nawman (4);
Cleveland 7-6, Murphy (9) and
Fisk.- Homa runs-^akland, Baylor
(13tn). Boston—Cooper (11th).
Chicago 101 100 000— 3 6 0
Cincinnati 000 100 010- 2 7 2
Rauschal 11-4, Sutttr (IJ and AAlt-
tarwald:: Norman 11-4, Borbon (9)
“IncTnnatl,
and Bench. Home run—Clncln
Morgan (22nd).
Detroit ~ 366 m odo 6— 3 4 i
<a. arn, Albir - (7), Hughes 7-10
(I), Campbell (10) and Wynagar;
F..' cn .- -S end KImm. f— “ ‘
Houslon 010 030 000 — 4 4 2
phlla. 000 141 Wx— 7 13 0
Richard 14-13, Pantz (7), SambHo
(7) and Johnson; Kaat 1i-4, Chris-
fanson (4), Reed (7) and Boone.
Homa run—Houston, *“■'
(7th).
California 120 000 000 1— 4 12 0
New York 000 300 000 0— 3 5 0
Ross, Scott 2-0 (7) and
H j.rray; EMIs, Jackson (2), Ti-
drow 6G ( 4 ) and Murwen. Homa
f ;>-C8l)(ornla, Torres,
Naw York, Gambit, (I4th>.
(Sth).
... _ 100 010 666— 2 It 1
Morton 4.9, D^lna ( 4 ) and Cor-
rail; Forach 5-9, Solomon (4), Wal¬
lace (4) end Simmons.
Cleveland W 000 100— 3 7 0
Texas 300 013 OOx— 5 12 0
Brown 7-9, Buskey (4) and
Fossa: Parry 12-10 and Sundbaro.
Homa run—Clavtland, Powall <7th).
Pittsburgh OOO 000 OlO- 1 2 1
Los Angaiaa 002 120 OOx— 5 10 1
AAoosa 34, Takulva (4) Medich
( 4 ) and Sanguillan; Sutton 15-9 and
Rodriguaz. Home runs—Pittsburgh,
Parker (4th). Los Angalat, Gsrvay
(9th).
Eskimos held on in the third
quarter, adding a point on a
wide field-goal tiy from 33
>-81x18 by Dave Cutler, but it
was mainly due to the help
provided by the Riders.
The Ottawa chib got within
12 yards at one time, but
called for a fake field-goal
try. Instead of three points
they turned, the ball over on
the l-Idmonton 36-yard line.
Coming back near the end
of the quarter, they were set
back on the fhvt p4ay of the
fourth quarter when l^Ikvway
tripped and fell after taking
the handoff and fumbled the
ball away. 'Hiey got it back on
an interception, and Holloway
finally got a touchdown on a
28-yard end-pass to Moody
Jackson — but not before Um
R iders had been moved back
from the 13-yard line and lost
a touchdown (Xi an illegal pro¬
cedure penalty.
. Organ’s convert put Ottawa
ahead, 16>15, then the Riders
Plans pushed
despite
assassination
BIJENO 8 AIRES (AP) —
Ttie military government
reaffirmed ^ latenttoa Satur¬
day to stage the 1B78 World
Soccer Cup charo|donahip In
Argentina despite the terror¬
ist assassination of the pres¬
ident of the championship or¬
ganizing cofnmittee. The com¬
mittee president, retired Gen.
Omar C. Actla, waa killed
Thursday alien sospectsd ter¬
rorist gnnmen Bred at him as
he left his home In Wilde, a
Buenos Aires suburb. Actis
had been aiqioliitod only three
weeks ago, and be died a few
hours before bo srao sche¬
duled to give his first neas
conference.
Sport today
SOFTBALL
II a.m. 8 and 8:80 p.ra. Con¬
tinuation of Greater Victoria
senior playoffs. Central
Park.
1 p.m. — Aluffy McGinnis
Men’s League, either last
game of semi-final series or
first game of final series.
Central Park.
BASEBAIJ,
1 and 8 p.m. — Senior Ama¬
teur League playoff double-
header. Gorge Hotel \9. KuM-
ceks Home Service, l.aiubrick
Park.
CRICKET
1:30 p.m. — District AhsocI-
atlon: Nanaimo vs. Alcoa,
Windsor Park.
LACROSSE
8 p.m. — Western Canada
Junior l./eague, seventh game
of be«t-of-se*’en semi-final,
New Westminster Salmon-
bellies vs. Victoria McDon-
aids, Esquimau Sporta
Centre.
Monday
SOFTBALL
6:80 p.m. — Stuffy McGin¬
nis League, either first or sec¬
ond game of pla>*off final
series, Central Park.
BASEBALL
B:8i p.m. — Senior Amateur
League, third game of best-of-
five final. (*orge Hotel vs. Ku-
biceks Home Serrice, Lam-
hrick Park.
Firat Qutrttf
1. bomonton. touchOown, W4r-
ringign, 13-y4rd pass from Wilkln-
io- (L'ltlar convert) 3;53.
2. Otfiwi, field goal. Organ,
from verus. 7:33.
rSacanS Quarter
' Edmonton, toucAdown. Harrell,
fwo-yerd peas from Wilkinson
(C;jtier convirt) 5:54.
4. Ottawa, tiHd goal, Organ,
from J2 yard*. 9:24.
5. Ottawa, flaid goal, Organ,
from 51 varos, 15:00.
Third Quarter
A. Edmonton, single. Cutler, from
33 yarcte, 7:45.
Fourth Quarter
7. Ottawa, touchdown, Jackaon,
36-yard M»a from Holloway (O^n
cenv^) 4:41,
4. Ottawa, aingit. Organ, from 34
yards, )1:()9.
9. Edmonton, field goal. Cutler,
from ti yards, 13:30.
10. ^awa, field goal. Organ,
from 47 yKd*, 14:59.
Ottawa 3 4 0 11—20
Forego upset
Edmonton
3-1S
Ott idm.
27 First down* 14
201 Yartt rushinf S3
314 Yard* passing 344
414 Net offence 3)1
14-24 Passes-made-trled 22-39
3 (nterceptiont 1
3- 3 Fumhiee-lost 3-3
4- 43.5 Funl»-averaga 4-40J
19-45 Fenalflct-yard* 1-25
Net oftgnca la yard* easalng plus
—— ^ mim - *—.
OCEAXPORT. N.J. (AP) -
Greentree- Stable’s Hatchet
Man. making his move alcaig
Ute inside after Intrepid Hero
forced Forego wide in the
stretch, scored a one-length
victory Saturday in the
8110.430 Amory HaskeU Hand¬
icap at Mcxiroouth Park.
Forego’s rider, Jacinto Vas-
quez, lodged foul claims
agaimt both Intrepid Hero
and Hatchet Man, but both
were disallowed.
Pro football
yard* rushing, minus taam loues.
Graen 1>70; Edmonton, Barnatte
14-37, Harrell 3-U
Fauing: Ottawa, Folty 5-114, Ga¬
briel 3-75; Edmonton, Warrington
lo-ia. Harrell 4-36.
NFL ixhMflass
Denver 32, Settle 7
New England 2S, Atlanta 17.
Miami 24, Tampa Bay 31.
Kansas City ^ Washington 30.
Los Angelas 23. Oakland 14.
New York Jets 37, Houston 24.
Dallas 34. DetroH 16.
St. Louis 30, Chicago 1A
The IVUlingdon Cup match,
as is usual, will be chided on
scores in the first two rounds
of the Amateur.
Defending the inter-piwin-
clal trophy is B.C., winner
four times in the last five
years, and the uinner when
the Canadian Amateur was
played at Royal C^iutwd in
1967.
The B.C. team as of now Is
ma^ up (rf Roxburgh, veter^
an John Russ
1 Russell and Don Grif¬
fiths ot Vancouver and Cec
Ferguson of Victoria. Feiv
guson’s amateur status is
under question and the ROGA
decision won’t be made public
until Monday afternoon. It is
believed, however, that he
will be allow'ed to play. If he
is ruled Ineligible his place
ulil be taken by Daye Mick of
Victoria.
Players will go in three¬
somes with the first tee-off
thne' on Wednesday and
'Thursday to be either 7:45 or
8 a.m. No dedsicKi on which
had been made as of Saturday
night, tout it was announoed
that WilMngdon Cup players
will start from the ibth tee on
Wednesday. 'The first, trio will
go off at either noon or 12:13
p.m., d^nding on the de¬
cision on 7:-15 or 8 a.m.
On Thursday. Willingdon
Cup players will go off from
the first tee, starting at either
7:45 or 8 a.m.
F<ulner Canadian cham¬
pions trying to regain the
Eari Grey Qip are four-time
winner Nick Weslock, two-
time winner Doug Roxburgh.
Gaiy Cowan, Keith Alexander
and Jimmy Doyle.
Roxburgh, \riio won in 19?2
and 1974 and earlier this year
won the B.C. championship
for the fourth time in eight
years, is generally rated as
the fellow nkost likely to un¬
seat Nelford.
Rojdnirgh is well acquaint--
ed with the Royal Cbhvood. It
was there he Ut his peak In
1972. setting a 72-hole tour^
nament record for the club by
shooting a one-under-par 279
to win his second provinciHl
championship. He finished
68-68 in that one and Is be¬
lieved to be the only tour¬
nament golfer to ever shoot
successive sub-fiar rounds at
Colwood.
/Viefe Weslock
Keith Alexander
Doug Roxburgh
No one in the field has yet
acquired a record to match
Wealock’s. 'Hie Ontario veter¬
an, who is a member of the
Xlolf Hall ot Fame and the
Canada Sports Hall of Fame,
has been a scratch g(^er for
an amazing 38 years.
'That is protoaUy toe most
impressive of all. but in addi¬
tion to winning the Canadian
championship in 1957. 1963.
1964 and 1966. he has won the
Ontario Open se^’e^ times, the
Ontario Amateur eight times,
the Canadian Senior twice,
the Oitario Senior five times,
and he has been the Iom' ama¬
teur in toe Canadian Open 14
times.
Ninth feature victory
He recMtIy qualified to
play in the 1976 U.S. Amateur
and it’s reported he is anxious
to win a spot cm Guiada’s
Commonwealth team so that
he can get the chance to play
in the 1977 British Amateur.
in Hitchcox ’ sweep
BUl Hitchcox picked up his
ninth main-event victory Sat¬
urday night as he scored the
first sweep of the sea.son at
Western Speedway.
The hobby-stock [mints
champion breezed to victoiy
in the trophy dash, the heat
race and the l&-lap main
event before a crowd of 2155
at the Langford Oval.
In the super-stock class,
points-ieader Bill Price scored
his sixth main event uln
equalling the total of Bob Col¬
lins. who hod engine trouble
for the third straight week.
Tcny McKee, who was vi¬
siting from Ontario, Calif., led
for 34^ laps in his open
super-stoc^ iMt spun out w^hiie
being pressured by Price on
toe firad lap.
Tom Hamilton finished sec¬
ond, Jim Caudwell was third
and rookie Ray Vatcher
finished fourth.
In a special attraction be¬
tween main events. Dave
Whitings of Vancouver.
Wash., successfully Jumped 12
cars with his motorcycle but
fell from the bike cm landing.
He suffered cuts and bruises
but was not seriously injured.
In the International Drivers
Challenge for super-
modifieds. points leader Roy
Smith Victoria w>xi the
"B” main event but blew the
engine on the borrowed car-
designed for dirt tracks like
the ‘A’
Skagit—in
event.
Bob Johnson of nearby Ml.
Vernon wem the “A” main.
SUFIR-STOCK5
MAIN EVENT (35 laps): I. Bill
Prict; 2. Tom Htmlllon; 3, Jim
C8U9<^li 4. Ray Vatcher; 5. Jerry
Ferria.
FAST HEAT: 1. Tarrv McKee.
Ontario, Calif.' 2. TanY Forayth; A
Hamilton; 4. Caudwell.
SLOW HEAT: I. Ren Fleet; 2. Al
Jonnston; 3. Nall Moore; 4. Sig SI-
TflOhHY DASH: 1. Vatcher; 2.
Farrla; 3. Caudweil; 4. Price.
HOBBY.STOCKS
MAIN EVENT (15 lap*): I. Bill
Hitchcox; 2. Gordon Stone; 3. Rick
Bannalt: 4. Wayne Johnson: 4.
Dave Ireland.
HEAT RACE; 1. Hitchcox; 2.
Stone; 3. George Shlllilo; 4. Reg
Hayward.
TR-iPHY DASH: 1. Hitchcox; 2.
Al Millar; 3. Stone; 4. Dave Dalby.
Weslock has played for
tario 23 times in the Willing-
don Cup match, has been a
member of the Canadian
Commonwealth team five,
times, and the Canadian Ei-
settooM'er Cup team four
times.
HOCKEY
Swim marks fall
LONDON BOXING
CLUB
Oowan, also a member of
Canada’s Golf Hall of Fame,
reached the Canadian Ama¬
teur final five times when it
had a match-play format,
winning In 1961. 'Three of his
losses were to Alexander in
1960, to Weslock in 1964 and to
Doyle in 1968.
A twY>-time U.S. amateur
champion (1966 and 1971).
CkKvan has represented Oi¬
tario on 14 WlUlngdon Cup
teams, has been a member ctf
Canada’s Americas Cup team
six times, a member of Com¬
monwealth matches teams
lour times and a member of
Canada’s W<u*ld Oip amateur
team six times.
Ifo also has a Chadian jun¬
ior championship, four On¬
tario amateur titles and one
Oitario Open crown, an event
in which he has been runner-
up three times, to his credit.
Alexander of Edmonton and
Doyle of Winnipeg are veter¬
an Willingdon Qippers.
' Among many other interest¬
ing possibilities are Rafael
Alarcon, one of Mexico’s out¬
standing young players, and
Dave Allen, the only British
player in toe ft'M of 162.
Alarcon was selected to the
Mexican Eiseitoower ' Cup
team this year and was the
indivkhia] champion in the
last national inter-dub tour¬
nament in his country.
Allen, a member of the Wel¬
wyn Garden Qty Golf Club,
has won the West of England
and Hertfordshire Coimt>'
championships and reached
the 16$ of the British Amateur
championship in 1966 and
1975.
The field also includes 14
U.S. golfers — from Bellingh¬
am.- and Medina, Wash.,
Clackamas and Portland.
Ore., Houston. Oakland Pelv
ble Beach, ^cramento, St.
Paul, Baltimore, Canton
Maas., Punta Gorda, Fla.,
Bemardville, N.J. and Grosae
Isle, Mich.
Also in as of Saturday after¬
noon were 19 Vancouver Is¬
land golfers. 16 from the Vic¬
toria area. Tbere were 62
British Columbians in all, and
Alberta has the next best rep¬
resentation with 29 entrants,
and Ontario is next with 22.
No other pixnince has more
than five' golfers, and Saskat¬
chewan, New Brunswick.
Prince Edward Island and
Newfoundland are represent¬
ed only by the four members
of their Willingdon C^q> team.
in Canadian meet
VANOOIATER (CP) — Ca¬
nadian and, Commonwealth
records fell Saturday at the
Canadian swimming cham-
pionrt d p e as Becky Smith of
Ednvxiton and Robin Sor-
siglia of Beaconsfield. Que., ,
broke their own standards.
Graham Smith of Edmon-
don and Bill Sawchuk of
Thunder Bay finished in a
dead heat. ’Hilrd-place Gary
MacDonald of Mission Oty,
B.C.. was well back in 2:1L72.
Miss Smith won the
200-metre individual medley
in two minutes. 20.64 seconds,
almost two seconds faster
than her previous Canadian
and CX)mmonwealth mark of
Additional sport
P. 16, 20, 21, 22
2:22.07. Second-place Nancy
Garapick of Halifax finished
in 2 :21.72. Joann Baker of
Thunder Bay, was third.
Miss Oorsiglia broke her
Canadian and Commonwealth
record of 1:13.9Q in the
100-metre breaststroke, finish¬
ing in 1:13.39, just atead of
Lisa Borsholt of Vancouver in
1:13.96. Third was Judy
Garay of Torooto.
. The first two swimmers in
the men’s 200-metre individu¬
al medley broke the Canadian
record of 2:10.65 and finished
in 2D8.37.
Smith earlier won the
100-metre breaststre^e in
1 ;0-j.88. well under his Canadi¬
an record of 1:03.92, but still
more than two seconds ahead
of Roman Baumann of Sud¬
bury. Camil Chavalier of Que¬
bec Qty was third.
Rebecca Perruti of New
Zealand wot the women’s
400-metre freestyle in 4:18.24.
Gail Amandrud of Ottawa w’as
second and Wendy Quirk of
Pointe Claire. Que.. was third.
Stephen Badger of Winnipeg
won the men’s 400-metre free¬
style in 4D1.09. off his Cana¬
dian mark of 4:00.14. Sawchuk
was second arid Ntichael Kerr
of Vancouver was third.
Rob Grundison (rf \^ctoria
came up with his best per¬
formance ever in the national
championships finishing sev¬
enth to the 200-metre individu¬
al medley.
Learn
JUDO
Former Lion
calls it quits
SElfDffDNX
SELFCONROBNX
PHYSNM. 8 MBrr/U.
DISCIPUNE
DENVER (AP) — Denver
Broncos coach John Ralston !
has announced the retire- |
ment of Bubba Bridges, a
defensive guard who played in
the Canadian Football i
League. Bridges, who attend¬
ed toe University of Colorado,
was Denver's lettwound
choice to the 1973 NatSooal
Football League draft
Viclorii Jido Club
71S JohiMon 8L
MON., WED., ERI.
•:30.4m p.m.
of th«
Bl| '6' Htckty Lngu*
wlllatart
Practicoo
TUESDAY, AUG. 24
B P.M. at
6ior|i Piarlnt Atmi
All pleyert of Intonnedlala
’’A* oallbre ere InvHed to at-
ISQWMALT
SPORTS CENTRE
ENROLL NOW
1976-77
CURUN6 SEASON
start* Oct. 1*t
ENOUmiES WELCOME
Phon*38e-3261
OPENUnSRVAIUIlEFOR
HEW CUHURS RND
MIWKn OE 1 NISHT
M Mr tF TOW CWICE
FRSCMUWCURIC3
RM PRACTICE ICE TO AU
KMTBEl MIIT CENTRE
CERiat
UDES'EVLWAFT.UAUIEt
NH'S. MXa. SNIOIIS.
wrr. MNir. SCHOOLS.
SERVICE LEAGUES
Everyone Enjoys
Curling at the
Bridges was released by
Ednaonton Eskimos of the>
CFL after three games of the
1973 reason, and the B.C.
Uons signed him as a free
agent the following season. He
was traded to Hamilton Tiger-
Cats ipid-way through the
1974 season and played two
games for the Ticats,
JUNIOI^ LACROSSE
Waatam Canada Major Jtmlor Laagua
PLAYOFFS — SEMI-FINAL
McOONALDS n NEW WLSTMINSTER
SMOiy. Aif. a—I p.RL
ESQUmULT SPORTS CENTRE
UlllttK.50 ,.2, StROmtl a OAP 11.75
WILF SADLER, has be«n pressing: bard to get out of
hospital, won at least a partial victory Saturday when he was
allowed to si^end a couple of hours at home . . . Victoria's
major lacrosse cluba both sho^ved the stuff uoiihy of 8up|»rt
in coming from 1-3 to i»quare best-of-eex’en semi-final series.
71)e Shamrocks Adn't make it but they bowed out trying.
Congratulations to both, and good luck to McDonalils tortighi
in the aeventli game — the Agt'arian rugby team, which
plaj’B in the Victoria Rugby Union second division, could use
some players. Anyone interested can telephone John Poole
(852-5768) or Jim MacRae (632-3723), or turn uij at club work¬
outs held at 6:30 Tueaday and Thursday evenings at Bea\'ei
Lake Paiic . . . New York RangerH have New England
Hlialer* of the Worid Hpekey Association on their list of nine
l>re-«chedule games. The game is in Hartford, and it's been
.Imported that the Whalers are to keep ail gate receipts to
wwnplete the deal which put Nick Fotiu on the Ne\v York
roster. Fotiu didn’t score many goals but he was rated as one
of the most willing fi^tera in the and that appears to
be what made him look hke a good investment to manager-
coach John Ferguson of the Rangers ... Canadian Football
l^eague lockers missed only one of their first 87 convert
chances this season. Bob MacorltU of Saskatchewan Roogh*
riders, who is 16 for 17, is the feUow debited widi the failure
... it's reported that only one or two Team Canada fdayers
showed up overweight at training camp and it seems that
(.hancss are good that we will be repcesfflted by a reasonably
tit team in tl^ Canada Cup'hockey series ... and don't forget
that the first telecast, the Aug. 30 pre-series game between
Canada and Cfiechoslovakia, Is little more than a week away.
The first telecast of a series game is on the following 'niurs-
day ... the hope of practtcally every hockey fan is that
BoM»y Orr will be aUe to play in the series at something at
least close to old-time fornu And right behind that comes the
hope that Bobby Hnll will crank up a big effort. You can
probably bet on that one ...
★ * ★
REO REYNOLDS sort of took some of the spotlight from
the (Canadian Amateur golf chan^ionship when he scored a
birdie on the Uth hole at Uplands last Tuesday wliile playing
in a family foursome. It helped him to a 147. but Reg did get
his game together with a back-rone 63. Just the same he
found it (fisaY>painting. He shot 130 in his previous trip around
I’plands and he feam his game is going to pot. It is ... it
isn’t true that Royal Cohvttod is to measure 6245 yards for the
Canadian Amateur this week. That figure, which appeared on
these irages yesterday, was a misprint. It should have read
6425 ... BUI Veeck may be known as the great inoo\'a-
t(^ m baseball but if he is responsible for those shorts being
worn by his Chicago Bblte Sox he should be arraigned for
imdcing a travesty of the game. They’re so hL>iTa)ie they’d
make evm Jim Eddie stay away from a game ... die mh^
fivepin bowlspiel planned by Town and Oountiy Lanes over
tl)e Labor Day weekend has been canceled. There was a
gi^ response from Uprisland bowlers but Victoria-area
bowlers were slow about making entry ... another reminder
of how time marches on came last Monday when an arheie
infbnned that it was 28 years ego that Babe Ruth died . . .
Pinecrest Speedway, which was built in 1953. is being bull¬
dozed to make way lor an industrial development and Toron¬
to will be without a stock-car racing track for the first time
in post-war years ... it’s more than a week since it happened
but you have to wonder at the reasoning which caused Mon¬
treal Alouettea to throw a pass from the Hamilton be\'en-yard
line in the last seconds of a game the Tiger-Cats were leading
12-lL The pass was intercepted in the end zone and Alouetles
lost. 11-12. It’s one reason the Eastern Football Conference
champions are 1-3-1. Anodter reason is the number of Canadi¬
an players lost to injuries, and a third reason is probalily the
presence of that ordinary sujierstar Johnny Kodgera. As
Toronto Argonauts are likely to find out with Anthony Davis,
paying one player an out-of-proportion salary eventually de¬
stroys team spirit unless the superstar is really super and not
ordinary ... Julios Rising is the most exciting player in
basketball, and basketball fans should take note d)at New
York Note will be the other team when Seattle Supeihonftca
op«i their home season on Oct. 24. There is no question but
that the presence of Dr. J. will bring an early sellout . . .
★ ★ ★
HARRY WILUA3LS is liaving another adventurous
s.uTjraer. The 21-year-61d Duncan' man. who clrcumnavigaited
Vancouver Island in his inflatable kayak in 1974 and last
.\ear i^addled it to Prince Rupert and back, has just
two and a half months iiaddling completely around
the Queen Qiarlotle IslamU. And he has now left .Nlussct t>>
paddle his way back to Maple Bay by way of Prince Rupert
and tlie inside passage . . NInual and Karen Dilloa will
have to wait until late .Seplenil)er to find out if their first bom
is to be a ix>tential member of tiie \lotorta Shamrocks . .
Joe Diikowski, who was lirst Memorial Arena manager, has
retired in Coquitlam . . . and checking out the ^lenloria)
.Vrena opening to help settle an argument (tlte official open¬
ing was on Sept. 25, 1349), brought the information that the
professional Mctorla Cougars, who retume<l to play the
.1949-50 Western Hockey League season, sold 627 on the first
day of their season-ticket push ... after watching B.C. Lloaa
in tour games there is a healthy new respect for the ability o(
BUI Baker. The veteran Canadian defence «id is having a
tremendous season and may be filling a Wg gap by taking
over club leadership. ’Ibe games also showed that the Lions
have come up with a standout in Canadian roolde linebacker
Oleo Jackson, and left the feeling that the Lions should use
tivedr Canadian running backs. Barry HouUhaa and Terry Bai¬
ley, move Cnan they do. Except for the big uncertain^ that
still exists about their quarterbacking the lions have Grey
Cup po^rtial . . . former game warden Joe Jones, 87 and not
showing It. got the best of a stubborn 23^4-pound Chinook
salmon while fishing with Bby» Davis last Sunday . . . Bill
and Alla Fuller are g/ir« to have a sotfthall luiiiiiy. Thej’U
be in St. Ilyacintip to watch dauj^ter FUjsemary pitch for
Vancouver Do<**iMue* in the Canadian women's final, and
ilicre will be tim| lelt to get to Niagara Falls to watch Me-
toria Bale* detend the Canadian men’s title. And you can be
<ure tlvit Art ank Joyce St Clair will also l)e at Niagara
Fails . . pigs areWing used in an experiment at the Uni¬
versity of CiHfomia is designed to judge the value of
Kjgj^ng to both healthy humans and those who have had
some heart trouble. That's fine, but it isn’t exactly comfort-
lug. •particii‘'arly if you are a Wt namded In front. To learn
that a rewean-h assistant informed that pigs are twing used
because “Tlie eating habiLs of pig-s and men are much alike.”
Saanich club bows
in lacrosse final
BURNABY — Burnaby
Cablevision captured the B.C.
junior "B” lacrosse title by
edgir^ Saanich E. J. Hunters.
14-13. Saturday.
The Mainland squad broke
a 13-13 deadlock with about a
minute remaining and took
the l)€st-of-five series in
straight games.
« Mike O’Reilly led the Cable-
viskxi with two goals and
eight as.siats. Willie Sujiyama
scored one goal and picked up
.six assists and Gary Grov'e
sc<Mred three goels.
Wayne Larson scored tliree
goals and Wayne Reeve had
two goals and three assists
tor Saanich. Terry Jay and
Bill Van Bu.skirk scored twice
each and Steve Bow’ack. Dave
Thompson. Terry Gibbard
and Ed Van Dy'ke scored once
eac^.
Neither team was able to
pull away as the first period
ended. 4-4 and the second
finished tied. 7-7.
Rick Bains made 30 saves
in the Saanich goal and Greg
Pryde stopped 38 shots for
Burnaby which will compete
in the Canadian cham¬
pionships Sept. 1-8 at Windsor.
Ferguson fires dazzling 64
to grab lead in B.C. Open
06111* Colonist Victoria. B.C. Sunda.v. August :
1976
19
Taiwan stretches streak
By P.At'L CARBBAV
RICHMOND (CP>
Brawny Cec Ferguson, trying
to prove tie’s "not just a goril¬
la on tiic tee." finished a
course-record-tying 64 Satur¬
day to take a four-stroke mar^
gin after twx> rounds of the
British Columbia Open gulf
tournament.
Ferguson, a 25->'earH3ld A^c-
tuna amateur, scorched the
Quilcliena course with a
.30-34—64 to make his tvm-
round total 134, 10 strokes bet¬
ter titan par.
His closest competitor is
Norm Reid of Coquitlam, vWio
tired a 68 in the second round
to give him a 138 total going
into today's final round in Hie
.$20,000 tournament.
The money doesn’t mean
anything to Ferguson, but if
Reid can hold on to his lead,
he will pick up $4,000 for
finishing first.
Just a stroke behind Reid
are Dan Halldorson, the long-
hitting Brandcm pro. who had
a 69 Saturday for a 13^ total,
and Tom Valentine of Galns-
ville, G«.» who coupled a first-
round 68 with a 71 on the mid¬
dle 18 holes.
The field of 147 who began
play Friday will be cut to the
low 60 and ties for today’s
final round, with 147 the cut¬
off point.
Ferguson began the day in
relative anonymity after his
opening-round 70, playing the
front nine with only his play¬
ing partners and caddies to
keep him company. He
scorched around the nine
seven under par. beginning
with a twxvunder 3 on the first
hole and shaving a stroke
from par on five other holes.
Although Ferguson cooled
off slightly on the back nine.
Cec Ferguson
tiring a one-under 34. he said
the large gallery which picked
him up didn’t bother him.
"The more the better.” he
said.
"It's exciting as hell. 1 real¬
ly enjoyed it."
Ferguson was confident
after his round, and said he
feels that "just because Tm
an amateur doesn’t mean I
can’t play with most of these
fellows."
But he said he does some¬
times worry about being an
amateur and going over par
on a hole.
"An amateur thinks he's
playing well and then if he
<.doe8 get a bogey, he ahvayt
wonders if people are think¬
ing, ’oh well, he’s just taking
the proverbial gaspipe.’ ’’
Ferguson said he'll be at¬
tacking the course today in an
eflort to preserve the lead.
"The only way to get any
nervousness out of my system
is to stand out there on tiie
first tee and try' to drive the
gjeen.
"But I’ll be happy' with a 68
or B9 or even a 70. Just so I
don’t shoot a 76 and have peo¬
ple say. ‘hes ju.st an ama¬
teur.’ ”
Wiile Ferguson was busy
shredding the course, a couple
of gallery favorites were hav¬
ing a tougher time.
Moe Norman of Gilford.
Ont.,a nd (George Knudson of
Toronto, trailed hy the largest
<*row'd. removed themselves
from serious contention bar¬
ring some mass collapses,
with Norman .shooting his sec¬
ond straiglit 71 for 142, while
Knudsr^i matched par for a
143 score.
Closer to the leade)*s are six
other golfers bracketed at 140.
including £d Byman,of Me.x-
ico aty. Beau Baugh of
Cocoa, Fla., amateur Steve
Berry of Vancouver, Scott
Knaf:^ of Belleville, Onl,,
Fred Haney of Portland, Ore.
and A1 Feldman of Auburn.
Wash.
John .Morgan of Uplands
and Bill Wakeham of Cow-
ichan were the only Islanders
to make the cut. Morgan
carded a 7S for a 144 total and
Wakeham shot 7.5 for 146.
.Missing were Ross I>ogun of
ParksvUle with 148. Kon
Floyd cf Colwood vvltli 150,
Bob Beauchemin of Uforge
\’ale with 154 and Doug Ma-
hov'Uk of Victoria with 155.
Ixtgan and lloyd are ama¬
teurs.
I'UKT LAI l>ERDAI.E, i'la.
(.\P) — Taiwan pitchers
Vung-C'hftBg Ctaaag aad
(hnng-l'nog liOe roniWood
Saturday* night for a one-hit.
44) shutout of Broward County,
for the Rig l.ittle I..eague
bai»ebatl World Series ebam-
pluDshlp. It was the third title
In as many attempts for the
Tniwanehe In the World Series
for buys aged 16-18. They
have won all 12 Series games
they have played. Including
four in this year's double-
elhnioation event. Tahrau
pitchers have given up only
three runs In tlure years, in¬
cluding two runs last Sunday
in a 7-S victory’ over 18A
Rest.
70-4i-l34
70-4S—138
8I-7)—139
70-89^)39
70-70-140
7t-8a>140
Norm R*ld( CoquIHsn
Tom V9l90tlr»e. U.5.
Dan HoJtOorton, Man.
Scott Knsso, Ont.
Al Ftidmtn, U.S.
Beau Baugh, U.S-
a-Strva Barrv, Van.
Ed Byman, Mexico
Frtd Haney, U.S.
Tom Irwin, N.B.
Bob Allard, U.S.
Oava Barr, Kalowna
AAarK Shuahack. Onl.
Mika maar, Ont.
Bill Graatrax. Van.
Mot Norman, Ont.
Stava Cole, U.S.
Terry Kendall. N.Z.
Bob Oudtn, U.S.
Doug Campbell, U.S.
OTHER ISLAND SCORES
John Morgan, Victoria 71-73—144
Bill wakeham, Cowkhan 7|.7S—14a
a-Rosa Logun, ^kavIMa 7S-73—14S
a-Ken Floyd, Vicioria 7S-7S—ISO
Bob Baauchamin, Victoria
77 . 77 —tS4
Doug Mahovllc, VIctwIa 74-79—153
a—denotes amalevr.
M-^140
a9.71—140
71.70— 141
77 . 49 —141
70- 71—14!
71- 70—141
71.^141
70- >2—142
71- 71—142
47-75—142
74-68—143
77 . 70 — 112
n-«—142
Darkness halts
playoff game
Darkness was the winner in
Saturday night's senior C
men's softball playoff is In¬
graham Hotel and Mike’s
Sports Shop played to a 2-2 tie
at Central Park. Game will be
Sounders
ousted
Abe Coker drilled two goals
and Jeoff Barnett made a sen¬
sational second half save on a
penalty kick to preserve his
eighth shutout as the Minneso¬
ta Kicks blanked the Seattle
Sounders 3-0 Saturday nifidit in
a North American Soccer
League quarterfinal playoff
game.
A N.\SL record playofl
crvivvd of 41,405 saw the game.
Minnesota will host the Sun
Jose Earthquakes for the Pn-
<• i f I r Conference ch^m-
laonsliip Wednesday night and
the winner advances to tlie
soccer bowl title game in
.Seattle's new Kingdome Aug.
28.
San Jose reached the semi¬
final with a 2-0 victory over
Dallas.
In the other semi-finals,
Toronto won a spot by edging
Chicago. 3-2. and will meet
Tampa Bav. winner over New
York, 3-1.
replayed if oulcojne has bear¬
ing on final standing.
All scorhug was done in first
three innings with Mikes scor¬
ing single runs in the first and
third and Ingraham pushing
across runs in the second and
third.. Ingraham collected six
hits olf Bob Harris while
Mikes touched Randy Jackson
for two.
Central Path will be a busy
scene today with four games
scheduled. Ingraham and
MoUons continue the senior C
series at 11. At t Royal Oak
and Sajke clash in the fifth
and deciding game of their
Stuffy McGinnis League semi¬
final.
At 3 Mikes, and Molsons re-
.sume the C series, followed at
6:30 by Ingraham and Mikes.
Home of the Friendly Curlers..
CURLERS
ITS PUIYUIND hr CURUN6 ACTION
wttti iMgiM play starting Oct. Srd
ereiwn avmuile m the fouowing lasuEt
FM COMPUTE MM». COUPUt OR MDWDWU
IF YOU HURRY— _
—i_i—
MEN'S LEAGUE
Mon. & Thur*.—Evening Curling
TADiSTiAGUES*
Daytime—Tues. & Thurs.
Evening—Tue*. 9-11 p.m.
7li?KsEMORLEACUr^
(55 or over)
Mon.8Frj.9^J1;30a.m^
MIXED SENIOR LEAGUE
(Men 55 or over. Ladies 50 or over)
_Wed«.-j;W-1_1;30 a.nii._
MIXED LEAGUES
Tue«., Weds., & FrL evenings
Sunday Daytime A Evening
FOR DETAILS REGARDING LEAGUE CURLING
AND INFORMATION ON VANCOUVER
ISLAND'S SECOND ANNUAL SILVER BROOM
CURLING SCHOOL STARTING SETT. 27—PH.
479-71U
CURUNC-THf PASTIME Of THOUSANDS
—MAKE IT YOURS—
Playland Curling .Club
4240 Olanford Ave.
479-7100
HUNTING LICENCES
> internation al
■ - l^IVLb
574 YATES ST. 383-2422
(•croM from thg Post Office)
ESQUIMALT
RECREATION CENTRE
COME ON OUT THIS WEEKEND
SATURDAY, AUGUST 21 SUNDAY, AUGUST 22
DUNCAN
%
GRAND OPENING SALE
At Our New Boatland location
ON COLDSTREAM AVE.
527 FRASER STREET
NOTE;
OURNEW
PHONE NUMBER
386-8734
SPECIAL PNY TOTS
SWIMMING CLASSES
A8ES 3 to 5
lli|.30nitiSipl.1IMi
TIm: to !.■. M 12 NM
Cost: 9 LntMt 111.00
RIOliTflATION
Aug. n to Amo. M
Early reglvtratlon It '
tuggetted at we can
iccommodate only 32
youngatart.
GREAT
GET AWAY FROM IT ALL
DUNCAN I
VICTORIA RV CENTRE
COME ON OUT THIS WEEKEND
TO
YOUR TOTAL RECREATION CENTRE
and
PRICES SLASHKDI
All Canopiaa—Tant Trallara—KM and Scampar Travai Trailars
VICTORIA RVCENTRE
1080 GOLOSTREAM HIGHWAY 1A 478-8377
FRANK NAVIES
(GENERAL SALES MANAGER) SAYS;
DON'T SIGN
ANY DEAL
‘TIL YOU SEETHE
DEALS WE’RE
OFFERING
The Factory has announced that 1977
units will be up 6% + a freight Increase -f
increased excise tax on air conditioning -l-
weight groups.
VICTORIA DODGE CHRYSLER LTD.
NOWON OUR ANNUAL MODEL
CLEAROUT
.» .4.
SALE
EACH UNIT BEARS OUR SALES IN¬
VOICE ON THE WINDSHIELD SHOWING
THE LOWEST PRICE WE WILL SELL
THE UNIT AT.
SAVINGS AT THIS PRICE TO WHAT A
1977 WILL COST EXCEED $1000.00
50 ASPENS
15 DARTS
9 CORONETS
6 COROOBAS
25 DEMONSTRATORS/
25 COLTS
15 ARROWS
25 TRUCKS
OVER 150
CARS AND
TRUCKS
WHAT A
SELECTION
TO CHOOSE
FROM
PAYMENT
ON MPmVEII CffiDIT
LOW OANK MTE
INTEREST UP TO
00 aONTHS IF NEEOEO
ALL USED VEHICLES HAVE
LOWEST POSSIBLE SELLING
PRICE ON THE DASH
Remember . .
3 YEARS’ OIL CHANGES
AS PER MANUFACTURER’S SPECIFICATIONo.
NO CHARGE. ALL 1971 AND NEWER MODELS.
PLUS 30-DAY 100% POWER TRAIN WARRANTY
ON CARS.
AHENTION VAN OWNERSI
SPECIAL CLEAROUT OF OUR LAST
INSTANT CAMPER CONVERSION KITS
Bom 8 fi. and 10 tl.
models vsnoui cokm.
equipped with n all
aluminum Iramed
fdb'e and a solid
linoleum floor. 2 large
8iide-m lounges win
storage undernaal.
plus 4" thick
cu8^lo^s. The lounges
fold out mto one <i^
bed. Olher haiuraa m
dude a 2-bumer gas
range, a 35-lb. loa box
wth a sink cabinet in¬
cluding a 5-gaMon
water jug with hand
pump.
CLEAROUT
PfOCEKaKIT
□
VICTORIA
DODGE
CHRYSLER
HOURS: Men.-Fri. 8.9, Sat 9-4
819 YATES ST. 384-8174
(bultr Lie. No. D40M7AI
t-n
20 iSilU; Colonist Victoria, B.C., Sunday, Auguat 22, 1976
Jaiwii boivling roundup
Flora Martin adds
to trophy collection
By REG REYNOLDS
Flora Martin is becoming
as fine a lawn bowler as she
is a curler.
The Burnside bowler earned
her fourth championship in
three weeks by capturing the
club singly title vkth a 15-13
winr over wfending-champlon
Marg Atherton Saturday at
Burnside.
Mrs. Martin, who skipped
rinks to the Canadian senior
women's curling cham¬
pionship in 1373 and 1374, cap¬
tured the “Champion of
Champions" title earlier this
month and last we^end was
on the winning rink and tri¬
ples in the Vancouver Island
Association’s annual Hollc^y
Tournament.
Jessie Kinneard, wiK)
sk^^ped the rinks and triples
CHAIN LINK FENCING
GOOD FENC£5 MAKE
GOOD NEIGHBORS
RESIDENTIAL ★ COMMERCIAL ★ MOUSTMAL
3 ft. to 12 ft. or a chain link with comptata privacy,
green or galvanized.
NO JOB IS TOO MB OR TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATE—NO OBUQATION
VAN ISLE CHMiTuNK FENCING
DAY 386-1841 EVEWIWQ
^ Victoria
FIGURE SKATING
Club
SXATNIG SEASON OPENING SenUlHB 28a 1970
ADULTS — NEW THIS SlAtON
A fee for Wednesday night skating only.
Come and Join us for a social night of skating.
There will be Pre-Registration days In Main Lobby of
Memorial Arena on Sept. 4th and 11th. 1976 — 10:00 to
12:00 Noon and Vyednesday, Sept 8th, 1676 — 7:00 to
9:00 P.M.
No registration at Hocking & Forbes.
Registration on above days
and at Sessions when season starts.
Faas are as lollowa:
Junior & Intermediates $35 plus $3
Seniors $47 plue $3
Adults $32 plus $3
FULL MEMBERSHIF
Adults $3$ phis $$
WEDNESDAY NIGHT ONLY
Family Plan $94 plua $$
for each member of the family
Associate Membership $8 plue $3
QUALIFIED INSTRUCTORS
One Free Group Lsason Per Week
ANY MAN 16 ysaia and ovsr who hat not previously been
a mambsr ol the Club nuy skats HI ChrMmas FREE.
FIGURE SKATES ARE A MUST FOR ALL SKATERS
Group or Private laaaoni also avallabla
Take a seat
—with you!
Carry it and use it as
a walking stick-then
unfold it when you feel like
resting. Ideal for the outdoor
sports buff who likes to be
comfortable wherever he goes.
Light, strong, non-rusting.
With brown or blue trim.
$9.95
s BIRKS
winners in the Holiday Tour^
nament, won the “B" title at
Burnside by downing Marion
Barr, 15-12.
Mrs. Atherton wa.9 also a
member of the winning rink
and triples in the Holiday
event.
Rollie Mercer took the
men’s title Saturday with a
15-13 win over novice Doug
Benedict.
* At Lake Hill, Francine
Linders and Art Shaw won the
l>>gwxiod Trophy wldi a 17-9
win over Neil McKinnon and
Susie Cout^ In the all-Lake
Hill final tk die mixed Scotch
doubles tournament.
A total of 32 pairs started
out In the week-long competi¬
tion.
The Doer Cup mixed scotch
doubles covMluded at Oak Bay
Tuesday.
The final was an all-Oak
Bay affair with Agnes Wicks
and J(^ Wise beating Elsie
Young and Ben Lang, 31-12.
Frances Campbell and
Cierry Bing captured “B"
event honors widi an lS-12 de¬
cision over Evelyn and Alf
Leahey.
Mrs. Widcs earlier teamed
with Trudy Neelands to win
the Oak Bay club pairs title
with a 14-12 victory over Mrs.
Leahey and Gladys Willets.
★ ★ ★
GREEN PIEXTES — Vic
West was forced to cancel its
held day schedule for Satur¬
day because the new club¬
house isn't qidte fbdshed and
there were no facilities for
refreshments. Games chair¬
man Fred SalHs Jr. says they
may ask to borrow another
club to hold the field day but
added that it w<as likely that
the field day would be passed
up this year. Ihe clubhouse
should be finished within the
next month ... Joan Turner
of Victoria West is one Island
bowler who is In Ottawa to
watch the Canadian diam-
pionships which start today
and run through Wednesday
... Club champlonshipa con¬
tinue through dlls week at
most <dubs and the Yarrow
Cup men’s pairs tournament
is Sept. 4-6 at Canadian Pacif¬
ic club.
Flurries of goals mark
soccer season opening
Sandra Post
Sandra
catches
Kathy
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) —
Sandra Post shot'a two-under-
par Tl, including birdies on
the last two holes, to move
into a tie for the lead after
second-round play Satmday
at the $55,000 Patty Berg golf
tournament.
Post, a former Oakville,
Ont., resident now living in
FlCMida, and Kathy Whit¬
worth, who shot an even par
73 Saturday, w^re tied at
seven under par after 36 holes
on the 6,023-yard Keller Golf
Course.
Bcmnie Bryant, the only left-
handed gol^ on the Ladies
Professional Golfers’ Associa¬
tion tour, eagled wie hole on
her way to a 71 to finish at
five under par and in third
spot
Jan Stephenson carded a 72
for 143 and Jane Blalock,
whose five-under-par 68 was
low score of the round was at
144.
Jocelyne Bourassa of Sha-
winigan, Que., slipped to a 79
after an opening 73 fw 152
while Patty Berg, the 57-year*
old after whom the tour¬
nament was named finished
the second round at 156, miss¬
ing the cut by two strokes.
Cricket matches
end in draws
Albion and Oowichan played
to a draw Saturday but the
two points gave Albion sole
possession of second place in
the Victoria and District
Oicket Association.
John Buchanan scored 47
runs and Keith Dixon 27 runs
as AIlMon scored 143 runs for
nine wickets at Beacon HiU
Park but Howard Martin
scored 67 runs for Oowichan
which had 106 runs for six
wickets when time ran out.
hi bowling, Martin toc4c
three wdcfcets for 44 runs
while A)bi(mB Alan Carter
took two for 30. runs.
In the only other match,
league-leading Incogs played
to a draw with Aicos at St.
Michaela Univmity School.
Incogs scored 160 runs for
eight wickets and Aicos had
75 runs for eight wickets when
time ran out.
Erick Kjekstad scored 32
runs and Sevan Grant 28 runs
for Incogs while Alcoa bowler
Mike Dodd took three wickets
for 23 runs.
John Scofield scored 23 runs
for Alcoa while Incogs Rob
Wilson took three wickets for
25 runs and Dave Gladdere
took three for 37 runs.
P W L D Ph.
10 3 1 a
10 $ 2 2 31
10 S 3 3 29
» S 2 2 29
10 3 3 4 a
10 2 4 2 14
9 1 • 0 S
tncoo*
Albion
Oak Bay
Ct$tswaya
All-Blacks lose
PRETORIA (Reuter) —
Northern Transvaal d^eated
touring New Zealand All
Blacks Rugby Union team
29-27, Saturday. 'The winners
led 13-6 at the half.'
LONDON (CP) — The 1976
regular-season soccer sched¬
ule opened Saturday in
dixiught-atrickm England with
Evertcm highlighting First Di¬
vision action ki a 4-0 win over
Queen’s Park Rangers.
As the heat wave oontiniied,
Everton scored three first-
half goals against Rangers,
who finished fecond in the
English League First Division
last season.
Three goals were scored in'
a span of three minutes in a
2-2 draw betsveen Leicester
and Manchester Qty, while
Aston Villa blank^ West
Ham 4-0 after knocking in
three goals within a 15-minute
spell after tlie interval.
in one of the few low-scor¬
ing First Division matches,
league chamipiiHis Liverpool
beat Norwich, lO, with a Kth-
minute goal by Steve High¬
way. rt might not have been
an emphatic victory but at
least it was a satisfying one
for Liverpool which lost W at
home to Norwich last season.
EJverton’s star was centre-
forward Bob Latchford who
scored a goal in each half
agalTist Rangers. Goalkeeper
Phil Parks, who gave away
an own goal, and Mike Ber¬
nard, with a first-half penalty,
were Everton’s other scorers.
David Jones, Everton's
right back, was sent off after
18 minutes. Charlie George of
Derby was another who' found
it difficult to keep a cool head
in the 27-degTee Celsius heat
as he w^ ordered off in ttie
85th minute against Newcas¬
tle.
The goafl rush at Ldoester
started in the 63rd minute
when Manchester City's
Dennis Tueart matched a
first-half goal by Brian Alder-
8 <m. A minute later Chris
Garland restored Leicester’s
lead but almost immediately
Joe Royle made it 2-2.
Andy Gray, after 49 min¬
utes, and Ray Graydon, in the
54th and 60th minutes, gave
Aston Villa its flying start in
the second half against West
Ham. Gray scored again to
complete the rout of the Lon¬
don club.
But there were no goals for
the three men who obtained
the highest prices in transfers
Malcolm Macd<Miald, who
moved tx> Arsmal from New¬
castle for $586,000, Tony Cur¬
rie, to Leeds from Sheffield
United for (422,000, and David
Johnson, to Liverpool from
Qiswidi for $352,000.
For Macdonald, his debut
for Arsenal was a bitter af¬
fair. Not only did he fail to
score but his tram lost, going
down 1-0 at home to newiy-
I»romoted Bristol City. It was
Bristol’s first game In the top
dii'ision for 65 years and they
celebrated the return with a
'66th minute winner from Paul
Cheesley.
It looked as though it was
going to be a losing start for
Currie as Leeds trailed West
Bromwich Albion, another
side up from the Second Divi¬
sion, by two goals at halftime.
But fr^ the Second Division,
LONDON (CP) - RMUltS Of
wcor oomM playod Salurdov In
Britain:
■NOLISH LIAOUB
CNviuan I
Arsanal 0 Briatol C 1
Aston Villa 4 wast Ham 0
Ipswich 3 Totttnham V
Leads 2 Wast Brom 2
Lalcastar 2 Man C 2
Liverpool I Norwich 0
Man U 2 Blirnineham 2
Middlosbrough 1 Covantry 0
Newcastio 2 Darby 2
Oyeon's PR o Evarton 4
»oko 0 Sundarland 0
Divisloil II
Blackburn 3 Bolton 1
Bristol R 1 Blackpool 4
Chartton 0 CardlftT
Putnam 2 Notts F 2
Hartford 1 Hull 0
Luton 2 Sheltleld U 0
Notts C 1 Millwall 2
Oldham 2 Plymouth 2
Oriont 0 Chests 1
Southampton I Carlisle 2
Wovarhampton 0 Burnley 0
Olvislan III
Brishton 3 Oxford 3
Bury 2 Grimsby 0 *“
Chasterfleld 0 Northampton $
Crystal P 1 York 0
GilllMham 2 Reading 2
LlncoTn 1 Shrewsbury 1
Mansfield 3 Preston 1
Peterborough 0 Rotherham 2
Sheffield w 0 Walsall 0
Swindon 1 Port Valo 0
Tranmoro 0 Chestor 1
Wraxham 2 Portsmouth 0
Divisiofi IV
Aldorshot 2 Bradford 1
Brentford 0 Barnsity 1
Cambridga 2 Colchaster 0
Halifax 2 Bornomouth 3
Hartlapools 2 Exotar 2
Newport 0 Stockport 1
Scunthorpo 0 Rochdela 1
Southo^ 2 Watford 1
Southport 2 Doncaetar 2
Swansea 2 Oarlington 1
Workington 1 Crowe 0
Torquay 1 HeddersNeld 0
SCOTTISH LKAOUI CUP
Aberdeen i Ayr 0
Aloion 0 MeeootiW>enk 0
Artroeth 0 Celtic S
Berwick 1 Forfar 1
Brachin 2 Stenhousomuir o
Clyde 2 Atrdri^lens 3
Dumbarton 1 Dundee U 2
Dundee 0 Pertick 2
Dunfermline 0 Clydebank 1
Falkirk 1 Eaet Fife 2
Hamilton 4 Stranraer 1
Hearn 2 ^ttwrwell 1
Kilmarnock I St. Mirron 1
Atorton 7 Cowdonbeeth 1
Queen of S 2 Alloa 7
Ralth 0 Quatn's Pk 1
Rangers 4 Montrose 0
St. Johnstone 1 Hibernian 2
Stirling 1 East Stirling 1
IRISH LRAOUl
UlSttr Cvp
Ards 3 Ballymana 1
CoierahM 0 Glentoran 2
Distillery 0 Bangor 7
Glenavon 3 Crusaders 3
Larne 2 Cliftonville 0
LInfleld 3 Portadown 1
by two goals at halftime. But
tiU> goals in the final six min¬
utes, the second from Allan
Clarke <xi the stredte of time,
salvaged, a 2-2 draw' for
Leeds.
Rangers and Hibernian both
y.-on Saturday to set up a/stin-
ring decider to Secticxi Four
of the Scottish League Cup in
Glasgow on Wednesday. The
clubs ha\'e five points each
from three games.
Rangers w’on 4-0 at home
against Infontrose which would
have lost by a wider margin
but for the brilliance of Dave
Gorman in goal. Derek John¬
stone 2, Sant^ Jardine and
Alex Macdonald were the
Rangers scorers.
TRUCK
TRAINING
in Nanaimo
SAFERWAV DRIVER TRAINING
758-3421
COME TO SALMON COUNTRY
REDDER BAY MARINA
Metchosin—0(1 Rocky Point Rd. 478-1771
SALE
ENDS SEPT. 4
Our
Pra-Cbristmas'
Yes—that’s what we said
Pre-Christmas Sale!
bGcauM ttwr* won’t bo onothor
• on# till 1977.
BRITISH CUSTOM TAILORS
1311 Blaiwhard 383-2632
706 Yale, St
L L E R 6
Hllkldc Shopping Centre
Your recreaGonal vehicle
cost you good money.
You should get year ’round
enjoyment from it!
Now you can. At Cedar Acres, a home base for fishing,
hunting . you name it. This is a new concept in exciusive
campsites. As a tennant in common you are
a partner in ownership of over 20 acres of
beautifuliy developed recreational property,
and all these facilities are yours.
Children’s Playground with Swings,
Seesaws, Climbing Pyramid, Sand
boxes & Tether ball.
A Trout Pond.
Picnic Tables.
A Communal Barbecue.
A Water Fountain.
Washroom Facilities.
Sani Dump for RV Holdinf Tanks.
Ownership limited to 50 shares.
Badminton Court.
Come see it now, while the RV Centre Ltd. of Victoria'
has vehicles on display, fake the Shawnigan Lake
Road off the Island Highway at Mill Bay, drive about 1
mile and watch tor the sign.
Don't pass op this opportiwllp. Ottering Phase No. 1
at $7,S00 par shora.
PHONE TOLL FREE 7X3-4042
54 Camping Sites,
with Hydro and Water.'
Grass Tennis Court.
Recreational Hall with Bar Area &
Games Room.
Children's Playhouse Cabin.
Baseball Diamond.
4 Hole Pitch & Putt Golf Course.
Horseshoe Pitch.
Volleyball Court.
Cedar Ikres bmp Hub
Exclusive RV camping & recreational facilities.
V
V
iDttl!! Cdinift Victoria. B.C.. Sunday, Auguat 22, 1976 2]
Sport digest
Denver club dubbed
Colorado Rockies
Team Canada itching for real action
DENVER (AP) — Th« new
Denver franchite in the Nn<
tionnl Hockey League Imu
been nanied the Colorado
Rocklen, teem offictnU an*
Douni-ed Saturday. Sport*-
caster Bud Palmer anil oil-
man Jack Vlcker* aald laal
week that all legal problcmH
which may have blocked ef-
hockey to Denver had been
resolved. Completion of the
negotiations is scheduled for
this vfeek. Palmer nnd
Vtckeni had been negotimtlnr
for sevemJ wceka . to buy
Kansas City Scouts and move
the team to Denver. The
Rockies open their NHL sea¬
son Oct. ft at home against
forta to bring major-leagtie Toronto ftiupie l.eafs.
Canadian wins trap title
VA.NDAUA. Ohio <APl
Susan Nattrass ' of Hamilton
won bottt the women’s overall
title and the women’s all-
around championship at the
Grand American trapahootlng
tournament Saturday.
Aliss Nattraas had to defeat
Nila Johnson. Chattaroy,
Wash., in tw-o consecutive
shoototfa to take both crowns.
The women tied for the over¬
all title with 933 (rf 1000 and
for the all-around cham¬
pionship with 378 of 400.
The all-around consists of
the 2U0 targets in Wednes¬
day’s events. 100 targets in
the Grand American Handi¬
cap and 100 In doubles.
Although he did not win a
major event during the tour¬
nament. Gene Sears of £1
Reno, Okla.. won the over-all
men’s championship. Sears
broke 971 targets of the 1000
that were thrown from Mon¬
day through Saturday to tie
with’ young Brad Dysinger.
Graver H^. Ohio. In tlie
:»hootctff, Sears broke 97 of 100
to 96 for bis opponent.
England tops team golf
('iLENEAGLES. Scotland
(AP) — England edged the
Rest of the World Saturday to
win the Double Diamond
matfJwplay team golf cham¬
pionship.
The teams won two matches
each in the head-to-head final
over the 6613-yard Gleneagles
< ourse but the holes record of
the English team was two bet¬
ter than the Rest of the
World, which was led by Gary
Player of South Africa.
Scotland and Europe also
drew, 2-2, but Scotland took
third place with a better holes
record.
Player, after two days of
uneven form, came in with a
fine effort and defeated Mar¬
tin Foster. 2 and 1 and Vi¬
cente Fernandez of Argentina
upset TtMiy Jacklin, 1 up.
For England. Nell Coles de¬
feated Simon Hobday of Rho¬
desia. 3 and 2. and Tommy
Horton downed Kazuo Yoshi-
kawa of Japan, 2 and 1.
In the semi-finals England
downed Europe. 3V3-‘i and
ti)e Rest of the Wwld beat
Scotland, which eliminated
the United States Friday.
Vk-Vi.
MONTREAL ICP) Team
' Canada ’ has completed 11
days of workouts and now can
look forward to its first pre-
Canada Cup exhibition games
this week.
The United States, who w'ill
corTipete . in the si.vteam
round-robin tournament along
u-ith Canada, Czechoslovakia,
the Soviet Union. Finland and
Sweden, will meet Canada
Second try
brings title
SAORAIVIENTO <UPI) —
l>oiuui Hortoa ca 4 >tured the
L.S. woniea’t amateur golf
erowD for the first time by
heating teenager Marianne
Bretton, t and 1, In the M-hole
final Saturday.
The t2-year-old University
of Florida graduate rallied
from three down to take the
lead on the SUt hole. A loser
in the final last year. Mias
Horton went two up, on the
SSrd hole and halved the final
two holes with the iS-year-old
UCLA sophomore.
Dale Shaw of A'Ictoria
reached the eights of the tour¬
ney before being eliminated.
U.S. wins volleyball title
HOD. Hawaii (AP) — The
United States wt>men’s team
beat Japan in three straight
games to win the cham¬
pionship of the Pacific Rim
international junior volleyball
loumtment. The Americans,
who were defending cham¬
pions, fell behind 12-14 in the
secor^ game, but scored four
straight points to win.
.Japan took sedbnd place.
'Phe Republic of China was
disqualified Thursday after
Japan refused to play the
team and Canada took the
third-place trophy.
Japan refused to play Tai¬
wan because it did not belong
lo the Inlemational Volleyball
Federation, a charge denied
by Taiwan but later verified
by the IVF'. Taiwan was al¬
lowed to remain in the lom'-
nament, but its results did not
count.
Canada may go with juniors
TORONTO (CP) — Canada
may be represent^ by a jun¬
ior ajl-star team at ne.xt
spring's world hockey cham¬
pionships In Vienna.
Don Johnson, * president of
the (Canadian Amateur Hock¬
ey Association, said the jun¬
iors may be used if players
from the National Hockey
League and World Hockey As¬
sociation are unavailable.
The 1977 tournament will be
the first since 1970 for Cana¬
da. which refused to take part
in the intervening years be¬
cause professionals were not
allowed. Canada agreed to re¬
turn to the tournament when
the rules of the International
Ice Hockey Federation were
altered to make the profes¬
sionals eligible.
■■Ideally, the best team
would be {>ro6, but we don't
know where we stand in that
regard,” said Johnson. ’’I
don’t think we can afford to
put a team together that
would embarrass us.”
Canada’s return to the tour¬
nament was a condition laid
down by the IIHF before It
sanctioned next month’s Can¬
ada Cup tournament.
McHale quits committee
MONTREAL (CP) — John
McHale. president (rf Mon¬
treal Expos ol baseball’s Na¬
tional League, said Friday he
has resigned as a member of
the Major League Player Re¬
lations Committee.
McHale, a member of the
committee since it was
formod in 1969. said in a
alaiement he strongly dis¬
agrees with the decision mak¬
ing process of the three nego¬
tiating members—John- Ga-
herin, player relations ad-*
viser. Chub-'Feeney. president
of the National League and
I..ee MacPhall. president of
the American League.
■■Several of the National
League clubs which I repre¬
sented wore extremely upset
that they did not have a
chance to have a final review
of the recent contract signed
with the players association.”
McHale added.
Finland cuts Roadrunner
LASSE MONANEN. a for¬
ward with Phoenix Roadrun-
ners of the World Hockey As¬
sociation, has been cut from
Finland’s national hockey
team preparing for ne.xt
month’s Canada Cup after re¬
porting in poor physical condi¬
tion .. . Tom Paterson of
Vancouver won the four-event
combination race in the Cana¬
dian cycling championshi(>s
held at the Olympic velo¬
drome in Montreal . . . Dennis
fileed of Toronto Global* has
been suspended for three
game* for an altercation with
an umpire during a recent
Ontario Fastball League
game and Jim ( rusoe of Burl¬
ington. who was recently sus-
()ended indefinitely after a
bat-throwing incident, has ap¬
pealed the suspension ... A
crew from St. Catharines has
scored a two-length victory in
the 3000-metre race for light¬
weight eight title in the 100th
annual U.S. national rowing
championships in Philadel¬
phia . . . Dod Batle has re-
.signed unexpectedly as coach
of San Antonio Thunder of the
North American Soccer
League to resume his former
duties as head coach at Chico
State University in California
. David Pearson, winner of
six of eight races at Michigan
Internationa! Speedway .since
1972, earned the pole ixjsi^on
for today’s Champion 400
Grand National stock-car race
with a qualifying speed of
160.875 miles an hour, almost
three m.p.h. faster than the |
recorti he set in 1974. Buddy
Baker and Calr Yarborough
Tuesday and Wednesday in
Quebec.
Scotty Bowman, one of the
four Team Canada coaches,
says the gdVnes are coming at
the right time for his team.
“They are ready to play
games now,” he said.
“TheyTe ready to play,
there’s no question about that.
They want to play.
■■In our scrimmages, we try
to keep it so they are not
playing against the same guy.
You change every period. But
1 think these two games come
at a good time.
It’s a ehange of pace for
them in the ne.xt four days.
We have an intra-squad game
Monday, we have the games
Tuesday and Wednesday and
then on Thursday, the rink’s
going to be packed here with
about 15.(X)0 to watch, us
scrimmage.
’’That’s going to be a good
scrimmage with all the pec^le
here." he added referring to a
special piXHnotion. arranged
by a local photo company,
will permit the fans to- watch
Team Canada work out.
The U.S. team, considered a
weak entry in this fall’s tour¬
nament,- is still expected lo
give the Canadians a good
lest ne.xt Week.
“I think they’ll be aggres¬
sive.” said Bowman. ’I think
they'll play their positions and
play strong defensively.”
'Hie coaches have not decid¬
ed which players will dress
for the games iniQuebec Qty.
Team Canada will also have
a pre-tournament game
against Ctechoelovalda in
Montreal Aug. 30 before they
meet Finland in the opening
game of the tournament Sept.
2 in Ottawa.
Massengale and
four strokes
Snead
up on pack
nmr-xmm
WETHERSFIELD. Conn.
(AP) — Rik Massengale
blew a two • stroke lead
with a double bogey five on
the 17th hole Saturday and let
J. C. Snead move Into a share
of the top spot in the third
round of the $210,000 Greater
Hartford C^en golf tour¬
nament.
Snead had a two-under-par
69 in the steamy, mu ggy heat
and tied Massengale with a
54-hole total 13-under-par
200 on the 6598-yard Wethers-
Junior golf
field Country Club course
which, as usual, yielded some
of the lowest scores of the
year. The leaders’ total
matched the lowest three-
round score of the year.
Massengale, who had led
the first two rounds with a
pair of 65s, could do no better
than one-under-par 70 in the
third round. The double bogey
was the key to the wbole
thing. He missed the green to
the left, chipped well beyond
the pin and then three-putted,
missing from ^bout 14 feet
on the second one.
Snead and Massengale
finished the day four strokes
ahead a group of five which
included Lee Trevino. Chi'Chi
Rodriguas. A1 Geiberger, Mac
McLention and Bobby Wad-
kins. Trevino carded a 66 Sat¬
urday while Wadkins had a
67. Geiberger and Rodriguez
68s and McLendon a 69.
At 205, eight under par and
five shote back, were Hubert
Green, Barry Jaeckel. John
Schlee, George Archer and
Gay Brewer. Jaeckel shot 66.
Green 67, Archer 68, Schlee 69
and Brewer 70.
Masters champ Ray Floyd
had 67-307^ and Arnold Palmer
could do no better than a
74-212.
Masaengale's only victory i
in six years on die tour was in ,
last season's Tallahassee !
Open. Snead, a winner of sev- |
eral tourneys, w’as a winner j
in the San Diego Open early I
this year. I
Hot final round
produces title
qualified second and third . . .
U.S. stars A1 F'euerbach and
Willie Davenport won the shot
put and 110-metre hurdles at
an international track meet in
Innsbruck, Austria .. . New
York Sets won the first game
of the best-of-five World Team
Tennis championship series
with a 31-23 decision over tlje
Golden Caters in Oakland .. .
Ludwig Helmrath of Toronto.
(ook the lead three laps from
the finish and went on to win
the Trans-Am auto race at
Mosport, Ontario . ..
MANtyriCK. Ont. - Andre
Nols staged a final-round
charge Saturday to win the
Canadian junior golf cham¬
pionship.
The 18-yeajH3ld &om Ste-
Julie-de-Vercheres. Q u e . .
carded a two-under-par 70 in
scorching heat on the
660(^yard Rideau View Golf
and Country Club course and
finished with nine-over-par
297.
Nols had been in eighth
place, seven strokes off the
pace, going into the final
round but third-round leader
Yves Tremblay of Tracy,
Que. shot 79 and finished ti^
for second at ’299 with Doug
I..ecuyer of Edmonton and
Terry Hasimoto of Headingly,
Man.
Lecuyer, who had rounds of
74. 75, 75, continued his con¬
sistent play with a 75 while
Hashimoto, who shot 69
Thurtday. came in with a
final round 76.
Jim Duff of Maple Grove,
Que. and Jean Laiorce of
Drummondvllie. Que. who
shared the first and second
round leads but blew to 80
Friday, had problems on the
final round. Laforce 'shot 79
for 304 and a share of sixth
place while Duff shot 80 for
305 and a share d eighth
place.
Yvan Beauchemin of Tracy.
Que.. one of three first-round
leaders with 71, carded 73 Sat¬
urday and finished fifth with
300.
B.C. champion Joe Limoli
of Coquitlam and Dick 2k3kol
of Vancouver topped the B.C.
field, finishing tied for 20th
with 310s. Zokol had a final
round of 81 and Limoli shot
79.
Danny Walker of Castlegar
matched Nols’ 70 and was the
<mly other player to break par
Saturday but it w'as his first
good round and he finished
with 312.
Also at 312 was Lanny Saw-
chuck Victoria. He shot 78
and finished cme stroke ahead
of Bill Coupar the only other
VictOTian to make the cut.
Matthew Shaw of West Par¬
adise. N.S. captured the juve¬
nile (16 and under) title by
winning a sudden-death
playoff with Uuff 16, and Eric
Kaufmanis of Aylmer East.
Que. Shaw. 16. birdied the
second playoff hole for the
win.
Kaufmanis, 15, was runner-
up to Jim Rutledge of Vic¬
toria last year.
TOP « AND TIIS
Andrt Nols, Qu«. 237-70-2??
00i.e Lscuvsr, Alta. 2^-75—29f
Yvts Trtmblay, Qua. 220-79—m
Terry Hasabnoto, Man. 22>7A-299
Yvsn BMuchamln, Qu*. 227-73—300
Jean Latotxa, Qua. 225-79-404
Ted Bishop, Ont. 332-72—304
Jim Duff, Qua. 225-I0—w
Matihaw Shpw, N.S. fri ii W
Eric Kaufmanis, Qu*. 229-7A-30S
Brian McDonald, C^. 232-73-405
Jamia Kavarvaph, Odt. 22S-00—306
Dan Camaron, Alta. 230-7S-406
RoOert Phillips, Onl. m-79—307
Newton walpen, CM. 221-79—307
Mark Slamonsan, Ont. 230-77—307
Douglas Howell, Man. 230-79—309
Curt Worden, Ont. - 232-77—309
Dan Kodataky, Ont. 235-74—309
Dick Zokol, vancouvar 2M-ai—310
Joe Limoli, COQuItlam 231-79—3)0
Jean^Louis Lamarra, Que.
220-90—310
Brad Porter, Ont. 231-79->3t0
OTHIt BX. SCOftBS
Lanny Sawchuk, Vic. 234-71—312
Danny Walker. Castlagr 242-70—312
Bill Coupar, Victoria 2»-IO-313
Blair Christie, N. Van 23541-316
Bill King .Vancouver 242-11—323
Rik Massengale
J. C. $ne«d
Mac McLendon
A) Gaibergor
Bobby Wadkins
Lea Trevino
Chi (ihi Rodriguet
Barry Jaeckel
Hubert Green
John Schlee
Geoege Archer
Gay Brewer
Larry Neiton
Billy Caspar
Tommy Aaron
Wally Armstrong
»ri wall
Ray Floyd
Leonard Thompson
George Burns
Jim Colpeft
Yugoslav earns net title
TORONTO (CP) — MipiB
JausovBc of Yugoslavia
trounced Australian Lesley
Hunt, 6-2, 6*0, Saturday to whi
the women's singles title and
$6,000 at the $155,000 Canadian
Open tennis tournament.
It took the 20'yeaiM}ld Jau-
sovec, seeded No. 3. less than
an hour to defeat Hunt.
In quarter-final men’s
play.’ unseeded New Zea¬
lander Brian f'airlie toppled
veteran Bob Hewitt of South
Africa, 6-3, J-6, 6-3; Wojtek
Fibak of Poland acored a 6-2,
6-4 Win over Victor Peed of
Paraguay; top-seeded GuiUer^
mo Vilas outlasted Onny
Parun of New Zealand, 6-4.
8-7, 6-2: and fourth-seeded
Jaime Fillol oi Chile tumped
unaeeded Paolo Bertolucci of
Italy. 6-4. 2-6, 7-5.
NOTICE
to all
Residents
of the
City of
Victoria
AUG.
31s.
is the
DEADUNE
for
VOTER
Registration
★
IF YOU ARE
NOT
REGISTERED
You Won’t
The hundred thousand
dollar rescue operation
. .. and why we’re doing it!
Not long ago, a competing touroperator quite suddenly went
out of business
It could have been a black eye for the whole industry. Instead,'
we decided to take a drastic step. We informed all his clients
that vacations would be supplied on an equivalent basis;
deposits would be acknowledged; reservations would be
confirmed.
In short, no customer was to forfeit a paid vacation as a result
of our competitor’s business failure. 'This operation is costing
us a substantial amount of money. Why are we doing it?
Because we want to preserve the travel industfy image in
which we have a large investment.
We have learned in the many years it’s taken us to become
Western Canada’s largest tour operator, that satisfied
customers are priceless. They are the strength of our business
and come back time and time agaiin to travel on our various
tours.
hor your next trip to Reno, Las Vegas, Disneyland,
Lake Tahoe, Hawaii, the Maritimes, or Florida,
call your travel agent.
Ask them about "All-Fun Holidays.”
Tell them you like our attitude.
OFFICES AND AFFILIATES:
VANCOUVER, VICTORIA, CALGARY,
EDMONTON, REGINA, RENO
100% B.C. Md ALBERTA OWNED AND OPERATED
REPRESENTING
THE ttom.n-wwE isnovRs famii.y.
Qualified
to Vote
in
Municipal
Elections
in
November
★
CHECK
IT
NOW
at the City
Clerk’s
Office
CITY HALL
385-5711
local 208
• •
★
22 S34fl? Colonist Victoria. B.C.. Sundav, Auguat 22, 1976
Honest Pleasure scores
SARATOGA SPRINGS,
N.y. (AP) — Honest Plea¬
sure returned to his sprinit-
time form In the August heat
Saturday and won the $108,100
Travers Stakes with a recurd-
smashing performance at
Saratoga. Honest Pleasure,
who had not woo since before
the Kentucky Derby in May.
took the lead a few jumps
from the start and kept It aa
he scored by four lengths over
iungshot Romeo in a stakes
and track record tjme of t:00
I-.t for 1*4 miles. Favored
' Majestic light, ridden by
Sandy Hawley of Mississauga.
Ont., finished seventh in the
field of eight three-year-olds.
The Annual
SIMON CHARUE’S FESTIVAL
of tho SUN
Uqt. 3.0 4 DAVtl
AMuiM: 13.50 ay I'/t sIIm Soirtt il Dukh
C iB0l*l I* free h Hm ItiMi Hiikwiy
CRAFT MARKET i ENTERTAINMENT FAIR
FMllrtl MV 4« IM |Mt«y ITM a ta IMl ari aMM. I.C.
InofcKlIng* SUSAN JACKS
• Tho PIED PUMPKIN ENSEMBLE
CnR Sroco AvalUli 7464528 748-3428
AOVANCID TICKtr OUTLITS: FOLKLORf CINTRI
QUITAR A BANJO BHOF, 1114 BLANSHARD ST.,
RICHARD’S RECORDS. 1314 OOVERNMENT
Title Victory romps to win,
Cash Your Ticket hangs on
Royal Glint breaks down
GORGE FISH MARKET
in the Gorge Shopping Centre
at Gorge Rd. and Tillicum
MA46I3
HOURS: Mon., Toei., Wed., Tlinrs., Sat.
1*7 p.m., Friday, tad alto at our sew store
FISHMONGER
in the Hillside Shopping Centre
14M HILLSIDE AVE. iK-2213
HOURS: Mon., Tun., Sat.,
9:30-9 Wed.. Thura.. Fri.
FRESH SHRIMP
MEAT
2.99 lb.
VA.\’COUVER — Title Vic-
lory and Cash Your Ticket
were the winners Saturday in
the only stakes doubleheader
of the season at £.\hH}ition
Park.
Cash Your Ticket got away
slowly in the $10,000 added
PN£ President's Cup but got
fo the front and held on
against the challenge of fa¬
vored <'aptain'fi Party, win¬
ning by a narrow margin.
It was a different for Title
, Victory, who had. a goiag-
away nine-length lead at the
; find^ of the ScnoriHi Handi-
j cap, also offering an added
I $10,000 and run over a mile
I and one sixteenth.
{ Seattle-based Mondo I..ea,
I winner of two previous stakes
I races here this year, finished
I among the also rans.
I Opening day of the Pacific
National {exhibition brought
13,545 fans out tb watch the
thoroughbreds run but the
I muLuel handle was only
$792,772.
FIRST RACE — $1950. Cltlmlno,
ttirM ane four-vMr-olds. tlx and a
naif (wiongt:
I Callle (Charlton) tll.M $4.10
Maoa A Jewai
(Oailev Jr.) 4.10 4.S0
Crowncst Flyer (Carter) 11.to
Alto ran: Dark Blue Sky, Frotty
Serenade, Anthony (^, Coquitlamt
Reign. Leona R.. Eddlet Dancer.
Shcrrs Delight. Time: 1:19 4-S.
Quinella Paid: $39.00.
SECOkfD RA« — $3000, Claim¬
ing, tAo-vear-otdt. tix and a half
furlongs;
Fantastic Affair
(Chabara) tl.OO i4.jD sa.to
Oonnaieiia (Salas) S.ao 3.00
Zippart Quicker (Arnold) 2.40
Also ran. LaBelle Luna, Coriat
Capri, Early Curly. Blut Velvet
Mist, Little Larder. Time: 1:31.
THIRD RACE —12900. Claimino,
two-yeer-olds, six and a hall
furlongs:
Skovlnskv
(CuthUertson) $5.80 $3.30 $2.50
Miss Streaker (Leblanc) 4.70 2,10
Touchy Topic (Maate) ' ?.30
Also ran: WiTliat Duke, DarKing
Willie, Woodbine Court. Run For
Nana. Collectors Pride. Tima:
1:18 1-5.
FOURTH RACE — $2900. Claim-
ir>o, threo-yaar-olds. tix and a half
furlortgs;
Melody Maker
(Cuthbertton) $53.70 $14.90 $7.20
Com Dealer (Arnold) 440 3.10
Ftlex RIbbtau (Smith) 4 .OO
Also ran: Cap Dancer. Maior
Talent. Count The Pearts. O'Cedar.
Langley Jet. Time: 1:19 M. Exec-
lor Peid: S2S1.30.
FIFTH RACE”^“«g00. Claiming,
three-yaar-oldt, one and ont-tix-
toenth ml lee:
Local Boy
(Johnson) $3.10 $2.50 $3.40
Strahant Reward
272 GORGE ROAD WEST
Msr
WEEKDAYS 9-9
SUNDAYS 9-6
Prices EtfBCtiVB
Sun., Mon., Tubs.,
Aug. 22, 23, 24
W4 RMsrv* Ih* Righl to Limit OuantitiM — Whilt Stock Laatt
SMOKED
PICNIC
WHOLE OR SHANK
HALF Ik.
NEW ZEALAND FROZEN
BDNELESS
TDP SIRLOIN
STEAK w
FRESH HEAD gW WW
I^CE ]9
LOCAL
POTATOES
18-lb Bag .
IMPORTED imSHMCK
BACON
Sliead, 1-lb. Fhg.
P
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT
COFFEE
10 -oz. Jar .
199
B.C. FRESH .
PEACHESHQ* SSrJSino CflC
»*- CHEERIOS
PER CASE . 4.99 10-oz. Pkg.WWW
TUP o
PEPSI
COLA i
THE TEA
TEA
BAGS i20s
SWINOORANBEFLAVOIHI
CRYSTALS
4 — 3-oz. pkga. ...
SUNLIGHT
LIQUID
32-oz. King SIza
WINSTON HOUSE
VINEGAR
128-oz. .
ATLMCn
V CREAM
CORN
14-OZ.
AYLMER
KETCHUP
20 -oz. BH.
( A AYLMER
^ TOMATOES
14-OZ. Largo Tin 2lor
af®
W
CAPRI BRAND
BATHROOMS
TISSUE
Rtll
Fmihi
Pick
NALLEY
LUMBER JACK,,
SYRUPlI
(Peichoie)
Copper AAonarch I
Also ran; Just I
7*47 4 *
3.10 1.70
U_ebtanc) 3.00
,— -y... — Facts, Lots 0 Lip.
Time:
Track scratches: World Hero, Ca¬
nadian Silver.
SIXTH RACE — $^. Claiming,
thraa-vaar-oids end up, one and
ent*sfxt«cntti miles:
Newfields
(Cuthbertson) $11.70 $4.00 $4.70
Crystal Corrwl (Carierl 19.40 11.00
Shining Monarch (Arnold) 4.00
Also ran: Westsyda Story.
Graatsr Partormer. tall Squaw,
Sncilas Diamond, Traveling Mist,
Regal Return, Lady Latimer.
SEVENTH ^ACE 13400,
Claiming, three-year-olds and up.
six and a halt furlortgs:
AfNorning Story
(Cuthbertson) $12.10 S4.40 $4.70
Shoe Blue (Berroby) to.w 7.10
El Escerlst (Loseth) 5.70
Also ren: Pitt Meadows. Dr.
Hess. Lendscapt Page. Lord Occo,
Acrocyanosis, Fleet Atinatlon.
Time: 1 : 11 .
EIGHTH RACE — SlOXlOO edded,
the PNE Presidents Cup, three-
year^lds end up. one and ont-slx-
teenth mites:
Cash Your Ticket
(Arnoid) $7.40 $3.30 $2.90
Cepteins Party (Johnson) 3.30 3.9
Pampas Host.(Peichoto) 3.40
Also ran:' Trustwood. Grande
Ribot, Sing Music. Time: 1:44 3-5.
Exactor Paid: $20.10.
NINTH RACE — $10,000 Added,
the Senorlte Handicap, thrat-year-
olds, one end one-sixteenth miles:
Title Victory
(Johnson) $8.40 $4.30 $4.10
Maior Hike (AAaese) 10.00 170
bendina (Smith) )1.90
Also ran: AAondo Lea, Winalta,
Summer Lll. Market Babe. Little
Bit Of Nana, Girl Of Summer.
Time: 1:45 3-5.
Track scratch; Oarlanas Joy.
TENTH RAC'e~-^ $3050. Claim-
Ins. three-year-olds and. up, one
and one-sixteonth miles:
The Aryan
(Oeiley) $39.90 $11.00 $4.70*
Majors Pride (Maesel 4.00 4.90
Mr. Bright Boy (Johnson) 3.80
Also ran: Jack 'N Ginger. Saan¬
ich Spree, Austin Tayshush, Stars
Victory, Nelly Schmidt. Regal Leo.
World Statistics. Time: 1:481-5.
Quinella Paid: $109.9.
Attendance; 13^.
Handle: $792,772.
Entries
FIRST RACE — Claiming. $2
far thrte-year-olds. one end one
teenth miles:
Solar Mission (Chabere)
Winchelsee (Airth)
Soivtig Song (Manning)
Tap AAan (LeBtanc)
Por.t Of Vancouver (J. Daily)
Time To Market (Salas)
Buds Plavboy (Oemorest)
Bartek (O'Amours)
Crafty Times (Loseth)
Baiiadler Babe (no rider)
SECOND RACE ~ Clalt
$3,300, for two-ytar-oide, six
onM-ngK furlongs:
a-Minstral Moiody (Johnson)
Majors Dream (Smith)
Velvet Streaker (Munoz)
School Time (no rider)
Tropic Jinx (Salas)
ManhattanCady (no rider)
Dais Abble (no rider)
Swan Khei (Cuthbertson)
Winsome Willow (LoBlenc)
Welle B (Maest)
Also aitgible:
Underwriter (Loseth)
e-Poco C (Smith)
Dads Cookie (Carter)
a^O. weeds entry.
THIRD RACE — Claiming,
S2,300, tor two-yaar-olds. six and
one-half furlongs;
Weldarsruh Freddy (Smith) 1)5
pillingholm (Brownsell) 111
Crime Fighter (Cuthbertson) 120
Lucky Legoer (Sates) ns
Brer RiSH (Chebera) 115
Ban The War (no rider) 120
Dr. Broker (Berroby) 1)S
Berenq The Wortock ( no rider) 115
Coot Pool (Loseth) 11 s
Route Foremen (Maese) 115
Also tiigibia:
Tonys Tattoo (Chabara) 115
Fancy Scot (Cuthbertson) 119
Winning Duke (Carter) 115
Minstrel Lake (Carter) 115
FOURTH RACE — Cleimlng.
$1,930, for three and four-year-olds,
six and one-halt furlongs:
Ky Nomay (Salas) 117
Time Her (Chebera) 114
Singing Wheels (Johnson) T07
Aren Kegai (Demorest) 107
Salty Tom (Berroby) 123
Rehability (Manning) 109
. Country Wine (LeBlanc) 119
Madame Temeraire (Brownell) 114
Xingu (J. Oailev) 114
Rads Ladv (Loaaih) lU
Also eligible:
Klckervilie Lll (Oemorest) 104
Lovely SMnd (Airth) 112
Chequered Shade (Salas) 119
Surrey Belle (Schllet^rs) 107
more more more
FIFTH RACE — Claiming,
$3,09, tor tnrae-yaar-olds and up.
one and one-slxttcntn miles:
Johnny Two Dance (Arnold) 19
Star Arco (Furim) 118
Jacks Crystal BalL (Munoz) 115
Rishalee (Smith) 119
Mi Soldier (Peichoto) 120
Luptreus (Cuthbertson) 119
Oak Alley (J. Dailav) 105
Stormy Don (Barrolw) 117
SIXTH RACE — Claiming. $1,99,
for three-yaar-olds and up, six and
one-halt furlongs:
Noacception (Mmm) 19
Trable Treasure (Arnoidl 117
Misa Jay Note (Browntll) 19
New Pride (Smith) 19
Elsie Go Go (no rider) 113
Nathans Pal (Demorest) 115
Glory isle (R. Dailey) 110
Sweet Jackie (Furlong) 19
SEVENTH RACE •> Allowance,
$3,400, for three-year-olds, one and
onc-sIxtMnth miles:
Peter Gordi^ (Smith) 1)2
Aporeiand (Cuthbertson) 115
North Hand (SiHas) 115
Never Charge jr. (Demorest) IM
Tenusa (no rider) 110
III Be Fleet (Peichoto) 117
A Trip To Remembw (Loseth) IIS
Kims Fancy (Johnson) 118
Split The Atom (Berrobv) 19
Prominent Star (no rider) 118
EIGHTH RACE Claiming.
$3,400, for three-vaar-oMs and up.
six and one-halt furlongs:
Our Diamond (Smith 11$
Douro Valiev (Peichoto)
Jet Of The Times (Johnson)
Devils Daughter (AAanning)
Barbicif (Losath)
Pearlv 0 Will (Demorest) lue
Pax Princass (Maesa) 117
NINTH RACE — Allowance,
$5,200. tor thrt4-yoar-olds end up,
one and ona-slxiaanth milts;
Lannys Si^r (Smith) 117
Avalon Isle (Johnson HI
Patty Ruth (Loseth) IH
Solar Breeze (Munoz) ill
Turn To The Mt. (Manning) 109
Persian Godess (Carlhtr) 117
Pirate Queen (LeBlanc) 117
TENTH RACE — Claiming,
$2,800. lor thrae-year-olds, six and
one-half furlongs:
Peggy Princess (Wolski) I 10
Ticket Count (Peichoto) IIS
Whist (C'thbertson) 117
Dashing Danct (Arnold) 115
Greco Road (Smith) 115
Tearing Down (Johnson) 19
Willie TTw Kid (Brownell) 115
, Royal Place (Losath) 19
Selectioiu
1. Port of VaiKOUver, Crafty
Times. Solveig Song.
2. Akalors DrMm. Velvet
Streaker. Swan Khai.
3. Crime Fighter, Cool Pool.
Route Foreman.
4 . Rads Ledy. Timher Singing,
WhatU.
5. johnny Two Dance, Rishalee.
Oak Alley.
4. Sweet Jackie. Nathans Pal,
Miss Jay Note.
7. Split the Atom. A Trip to
Remember, Apprelant.
$. Douro vallov, Barbclie. Pax
Princess.
9. Turn To The Mt., Persian
Goddess. Avalon Iste.
10. Dashing Dance. Whisht, Greco
RMB.
IJSOMA. MUh. (AP) —
The career of Royal <znnt,
Ihuroughbred racing’s IBth
millluo-doUar earner, ended
in tragedy -Saturday when (he
horse broke down during the
BIBO,000 .Michigan Mile and
One Eighth which was won by
Sharp <iary.
Royal Glint, the 3-U»-B favor¬
ite. waa starting to draw
away with a half mile left in
the race when he hobbled and
his jockey •large Tejelra
★ w w
LIVE ON STAGE!
DELIGHTFUL
JUST FOR FUN
REVUE
8:30 P.M.
HURRYI LAST WEEK!
TMBUTCHART GARDENS
pulled him to the outside
away from oncoming horses.
Track veterinarlana report¬
ed that the Dan i4i»ater six-
year-uld gelding suffered a
fractured sesamoid hone In
his left foreleg and that at¬
tempts were being made to
save Royal Gilnt’a life. His
totai career earnings stand at
$1,004,815.
JpelieeTt §
dii\iing9
(Gourmet mMig. eloquently
served m luxury surroundings
LUNCH. MON -FRI. 11:30-2:30
DINNER; DAILY 5:30-11:30 P.M.
)31l Wherf, Hertwifl Ceurt
enter perking lot pest wharl at
bottom el Yates Street.
Reservations Please: 365-4497
Bnt
WE SELL GUNS
■nTYRNATIONal
S74 YATES ST. 383-Z4ZZ
(across from tha Post Ottiee)
821 _
irsA
CAPER.
— TONIGHT.
John MinoheH i
SUNDAY
a ss 4:8S p-ffL Swcf—tWn Ovliii
t:0S-S:M pjN. PwiiSy Setm
And PuMe SnarkHUrw
7;SS-a8g pjK. IlMrMSqA Swim
— Svqryww waWahw
MONDAY
izes-ltss PJTL MuS
r:0^8S pjw RAfSA U w Swim
— IWyOM WAlAO m A
ass-istss p.m. AduR Swtm
AT THE
EMPRESS HOTEL
Ltva On Stsga — Fully ProtsssK>nsl
“A ’Must tee’ ”
Audrey John§on. Victoria Times
TUB.. WB.. FM.. SAT.. I:M P.M
SUN.. THUNS.. G:00 P.M.
Tickets $6.80. svsilsbis from
MePhsrson, Empress Box Otfios
and at the door.
RESERVATIONS 311-3716
Sunday and Thursday Enjoy
(XINTINENTAL BUFFET 6
CABARET SHOW 0
, Buffet end Show $15
Show Only SA.SO
PM
PM
I-IT
-John Mlnthall Protonto-
TWO OF THIS CENTURY’S
GREATEST PERFORMERS
AT
THE
ROYAL THEATRE
CLEO LAINE
■ndlh*
JOHNNY DANKWORTH
OMMESTRA
TUES. Mi WED.
SEPT. 14 m4 15
S:30 p.m.
Hailed by leading critics a$
quite simply THE BEST
SINGER IN THE WORLD. She
has everything — a beautiful
voice, dramatic flair, rare
musical taste and a sparkling
personality that will captivate
you as it has audiences
throughout tha world. A night
without equal.
Ym. I would Ilk*
on* or boMi of
STEPHANE
GRAPELLI
Th* Franch
Jazz VIoHnM
FIHDAY
SEPTEMBER 10
S;M p.m.
Stephana Grapalli returns with
the Oiz Oizlay Trio. Fanxius
partner of Olango Reinhardt in
the Hof Club of Franca. Grapalli
hat recorded with such
musical greats si Oscar
Peterson, Duke Ellington, John
Lewis and Yehudi AA^unm.
tickets to see
these Bhows;
OENLAME sun
•.M
a.io
7.M B.M
TUEIDAT. kp 14 -
□
□
o □
waNEtDAT. tW- 1i _
o
□
□ □
trmiANEiNAPEUj Sir
7.50
a.M
5.50 4.50
FUMY. Uy. 11 -
D
□
□ □
UtE YOW CHAMa - CHAMEX
ACCOUNT NO.
II charging, plaaaa aign hara:
Chequea peyebla te JOHN MINBHALL LTD.,
11M Lanftay mtntt. VMoria
POR PURTHBR INPORMATION
NAME .
ADomat.
. CODE
CITY.
PHONE
f y
APPEARING AUGUST 25 to SEPTEMBER 4
DINNER SPECIALS:
• SALMON STEAK
• SPARERIBS -
• NEW YORK STEAK
Proper attire at all times
flHM V/EEh
rElTiMAL
Laszio Gati Exoeutiv* DIroclor.
Tha Victoria Summer Festival Orchestu
and Guest Soloists. • LASZLO GATI Conductor
At Horltag* Court, Provincial Muaaum.
■ Suqset Proiiienade Concerts
Two Concerts each evening — different pregrams.
First Ccncert at 6:00 p.m. Secend concert at 7:15 p.rn.
MONDAY. AIMUST 2} • WBNEtUr. AUSUST 2S • FNIDAT. AUGUST 27
■ Audience qequest Concerts
Saturday, August 28th —n •.■. au 2:30 ym. (ir s u mm
Bring your own cubhiong, chbirt or blonkbts! In cbSb of Inclbrntni
wbbthor. tho cortcarfa will bb bold in tho Nowcombb Auditorium of tho
Provincibl Museum.
CirflliN CoNcwtt — H Friiayt witk Hwinin Birgink.
FMtinl OaMia — MM.-Friaiy., 12-1, Pirtliawl Buiidin|«.
■ fNarhet Square
In Concart—Thurs., Aug. 26,7 P.M.
(Bounded by Johnson. $tore. and Pandora)
Entrance from Johnson St.
■ Sunday Concerts
Aug. 23 and Aug. 2 D ieecon HHI Perk, 2:30 p.m.
In the Cameron Bandetwll.
a rilm festival
In the Nawoomba Audtterlum — Provincial Mueaum
at S:30 p.m.
MON.. AU6. ZS-'-NONM JEWISM. RUN MAKBT'
WED.. AIN. ZS-tACTlEBUAM CAVES"
FM.. AW. Z7—"W nUUE « HANK." "MKl IStAND"
a [xhibitioq
JAPANEK-CANAMAI CENTBNHAL EXHWT-
PMVINCIAL ANCNniES NkMNt. MON.-FN.. I-S.
■I ALL IVINTS NICE
Spongored by; The Government of British Columbia tftrough tha B.C. Cultural Fund, The
Department of Public Workg and the Department of Labour. The Municipalities of Victoria.
Saanich and Oak Bay. The Abacus Cittea Ltd. (Market Squere Concerts), and the Music Parfor-
mance Trust Fund through the Victoria Musicians Aaaocieiion.
/
J
New-season TV lineup may show
decrease in crime, violence
T/xs an<;ki^ (ap) -
Television’s eai’ly evening
^•iew^nK hours will continue to
Vie governed by the industry’s
soK'ftlled non-^^olent family
viewing hours policy this fall
and there will he fewer police
and private detective shos^Tr
on the air. BiJt the c«i-
troversy o\er TV violence
rages on.
The American Medical As¬
sociation called attention to
the issue in June when it
passed a resolution which said
television violence was a haz¬
ard "threatening the health
and welfare of >^06 Ameri¬
cans, indeed our future s(x?i-
'Phe resolution said "televi¬
sion's massive daily diet of
symbolic crime and violence
in entertainment programs"
enceRcainmenc
GUioe
RUTCHART GARDENS OPEN EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR.
NOW f a.m. to 11 p.m. Many pleasing features combine to add to
your pleasure. Your regular admission covers tli^ all —
Smashing stage shows . . Puppet Shows etc.. . . Ross Fountains
in their majestic "Ballet To Hie Stars ". . Romantic after-dark
illumination . . . 6 different GardMis; Fabulous SunkM, English
Rose, Stately Italian. Quaint Japanese. Lake Garden and the Great
Stage Show Garden . . pliu the Begonia Bower, Show
Greenhouse and fascinating Gift and Seed S^ Come Early! ^
It All! It's the thrifty way to enjoy the Gardens.
RUTCHART GARDENS RESTAURANT. Open every day 11 a m.
to 7 30 p m. (Sorry, no reservations.) Coffee Bar Service always
available.
RUTCHART GARDENS SMASHING STAGE ENTERTAINMENT
NOTE: Stage shows lor 1976 season terminate with (he Friday.
August 27tb show. Other fine daily entertainment continues alter
that dale
MONDAY. AUGUST Zard. t;3« P.M. "JUST FOR FUN ’71’
Live! On Stage. Musical variety show; laughter, cwnpany of 20.
lavish costumes, featuring Rc^in Clarke/Maureen Fraser, Althea
McAdam, Murray McAlpme. James MacFarlane, ian McIntyre
Madeline Paul. Kathy Roberts. Christopher Ross. Woody
Woodland. Kevin Woodward and full stage orchestra Also the
' Butchart Gardeners ' l;J0p m. to 3 30 p.m. and 6 00 to6 OOp m.
TUESDAY. AUGUST S4th. 1:30 P.M. - Same as Monday iisting
PLUS — the "Zingari Puppets" at 7 and 7;35 pm.
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 2&th. 8:30 P.M. - Same a.s Monday
listing.
THURSDAY. AUGUST ttth. 8:30 p.m. SCOTTISH AND VARIETY
NIGHT — Colourful Scottish Stage Show and Tattoo. Thrill to the
Pipes and Drums of the Canadian Scottish Repment (Princess
Mary's) as they march <» our stage and parade in the great Stage
Show Garden. Plus other entertainment starring George Mc-
Dowall. June Dupuis, the Adeline Duncan Dancers, with Ernie
Durant. Jim Furmston. Mary Ross and Dick Laihigee. Also the
Butchart Gardeners." 1.30-3.30 and 6 00-8 00 pm. Plus the
Zingan Puppets. 7:00 and 7.45 p.m.
FRIDAY. AUGUST 27tli. 8:30 P.M. - Same as Monday listing
SATURDAY. AUGUST SOtli - Magic Shows. 11:00.12 00. 6 00 and
7 30 p.m. "The Butchart Gardeners." 100 in 3 00 p m. — The
Heron Family Humanettes. ' 3.30 and 4 30 p.m. — "Zingan '
i*uppels. 7.00 and 8:00 p.m. — Color Film Approximately 8;30p m.
SUNDAYS-Magic Shows. 11:00. 12:00. 6:00 and 7 30 pm. 'The
Butchart Gardeners" 1.00 to 3 00 p.m. — ' Grace Tuckey" Pup¬
pets. 3:30 and 4:30 p.m — The Heron Family "Humanettes," 7:00
and 8 00 p.m. — Color Film approximately 8 30 p.m.
BITCHART GARDENS KNOWN THROIGHOUT THE WORLD
FOR THEIR INCREDIBLE BEAUTY . . . EVER CHANGING.
ALWAYS LOVELY! — Skillful planning, constant replanting,
dedicated gardeners pooling their ideas and knowledge, keep them
that way week alter week, season after season.
Rl TCHART GARDENS - MOST GRACIOUS W AY TO ENTER¬
TAIN YOUR FRIENDS. PLAN NOW!
THE OLD FORGE dancing 6 nights a week to the fabulous
Brothers Forbes and Friends.' in one of Canada's largest and
most luxurious night clubs Ixicated in the Strathrona Hotel along
with their famous discotheque and restaurant Douglas at
Courtney Street. 383-7137.
i p n
Den Restaurant overlooking Thunderbird Park ^ng AIom Fri' &
Sat evenings. Piano & Organ stylings by Grace Germain Thurs to
Sun Ample free parking.
ROYAL OAK INN. Enjoy delicious iood in our Strathmore Dining
Kuom and Tobv Jug CoHee Shop. Please call lor iurther intonna-
lion 658-5231, ^70 Elk Lake Dr.
BRITISH COLUMBIA FOREST MUSEUM - 1 mile north • '
Duncan on Trans-(!anada Highway. This 40-acre outdoor moseun>
includes an exlen.sive collection historic logging equipment anrt
an operating 1 ‘2 mile railroad. Open daily iO a m. to 5:30 p m. wit>
steam trains running every 20 minotes.
VICTORIA SUMMER FESTIVAL - Promenade Concerts Mon
Wed . Fri. 6 and 7,15 p m. Heritage Court. Provincial MuseumiJ
Film Showings Mon , Wed., Fri.. 8:^ p m. Newcombe Auditorium
Provincial Museum. Market Square Concerts ITiursdays at 7 p.m.
Sunday CiMicert. 2:30 p.m Beacon Hill. Featival Quartet Mon.-Fri.,
12-1. Parliament Bldgs. ALL EVENTS FREE.
AKT EXHIBITIU.N. Mon -Kn . Provincial Archives Building
HIIATHERBELLE OUTDOOR DOG THEATRE - 17th year of
operation. Stage show Tues. and Thurs. 2:30 and 8 00 pm, and
Sun. 2:30 p.m . 4551 W. Saanich Road. 479-26SL
SALMON FISHING — Experienced guides, large boats Free Cof-
iee. tackle, bait. Oak Bay Salmon Charters, ^3366. 592-4164.
JJ.CAIE
with
LEONREDBONE<
wa.s "an impoiianf contribut¬
ing factor to the culture of vi¬
olence."
A majority (rf tlie rtotiors
and scientists who have atud-
ied the relatiun.shi}> of televi¬
sion and violence stale flatly
that it pnKiuces increased
aggressiveness at least in
some young viewers.
"We acknowledge that tele¬
vision \iolence can contribute
to aggressive behaviour in
some cases in some chil¬
dren." said Jerome Stanley.
vice-|)residen4 of broadcast
stHndnrris on the West Coast
for NBC television.
’** £)allj*n^OlOnt0t Victoria. B.C., Sunday. August 22, 1976 23
Frank Ray ’s big day
Guitar duo set
Jazz guitarisls Herb EIMk
( left), and Ramey KesHel will
be on same hill Monday night
FINAL PERFORMANCE
Four Soosons Mutical Thootro't
Gilbert & Sullivan
Collar Hill Community Contra,
3220 Codar HHI Rd.
TONIGHT
SUNDAY: Tha Pirates of Penzance
TICKETS: Eaton's Box (Mfice
Hours: 12 to 4 p.m. Telephone 383-7813
,7
f NO COVER
NO COVER
WED. thru SAT.
9:00 • 2:00
DINNER SPECtAU
SdMM StMk 4i
Sptr«SilS.I5
Niw Yirt Sink Si.ll
Propf AMf M Timm'
385-1031
at Harpo’s Cabaret, Bastion
Square. Doom open at 8 and
concert begins at 9:.30. Ad¬
vance tickets at $6 are avail¬
able at Harpfi's and Richard’s
Re4‘or-<ls on (invernment
Street. Tickets at the door are
WESTERN
MUSIC
bythp
Study Creak Band
4 SIngars
SUNDAY. 2 P.M.
SMki fflvtr Flito
Adulta |1 Chlldran .50
CHOWCHILLA. Calif. (CPI)
— ThU amall farm town says
"thank you" to bus driver
Frank Ray today for saving
26 of ila children from their
kidnai^iers.
TYie Chowchilia Chamber of
Commerce organized a big
celebration to honor Ray, 55,
who has driven a bus for the
Dairyland School District for
more than two decades and
iranajxirted the parent.s of
many of the kidnapped chil¬
dren.
The day will open with a
fiarade dowTi the town's main
street to the fairgrouncto.
After a prayer service. Ray
and the chiklren he led out of
a buried moving van in which
X oos»^®"fEBve!
they were imprisoned will be
introduced and awards pre¬
sented.
The festivities will conclude
with a barbecue.
Ray and two older boys
managed to push away a
metal plate coverir^ an
ojiening to the van. buried
near Livermore, and dig their
way out. They had been held
captive in the vehicle for 16
hours after their bus was hi¬
jacked July 15.
"Without him there it would
have ended differently.’' one
father said when his lO-year^
old daughter returned along
with Ray and the oihci 1!5
children after the onlcal.
As Chowchilla's 4.500 resi¬
dents celebrate, the three
men charged with the kidnap
remain in the Alameda county
jail.
Ito
GROCERIES 2
OPEN
9 24 HOURS 3
a QU0liLEY'S4
MVTatmem
H > 5
PhoKvix
SlIMIVKR ThfATRE
Thank You
Victoria
For making the ^
7976 season
our most successful
76 Phoenix Summer
Theatre Company
University of Victoria
ART GALLERY OF
GREATER VICTORIA
UPDATE:
An Evening with
the Classical Guitar
BRYAN TOWNSEND
Narvaez, Dowland, Ponce, Weiss,
Dodgson, Brouwer, Rodrigo
Sunday, 22 August at 8:00 p.in.
1048 Mom Slroot, Victoria. VIV 4P1, 344-4104
DINING WITH A DIFFERENCE
$ag ^pare ^ib ^ou«e
KEN PEAKER and ROLLY MeINTOSH
Plavs Your SING-A-LONG MUSIC
A SPARKLING ATMOSPHERE For
PERSONALIZED MUSICAL HAPPENINGS
Worid-Famout SPARERIBS — Full Dinner Menu
825 Burdett - CHERRY BANK HOTEL - 885-5:ffia
The Great Guitars
HERB ELLIS & BARNEY KESSEL
ONE NIGHT ONLY
MONDAY, AUGUST 23rd
TWO SHOWS ~ NO HOUSE
TURNOVER
DOORS I P.M.
TICKrt II AOVARCE. S7 DOOR
AT RICHARD'S RECORDS
1318 GOVERNMENT OR
15 Bastion Square 365-5333
'S' THE KIDS
and have a good
time together!
$ioo
ONLY I
OPEN EVERY DAY
FROM 10 TO 101
Douglas at Vanalman
(take thk IM bun from town)
Nixt li Douilit
Golflind
479-1122
SENEIUL
NieHUY
I Tag
Llmttad Return
1 WEEK ONLY
MotmoM Sot. 4 tun.
Aug. 21 4 22
1 ond 3 P.M.
Fine Restaurant
becomes a legend in
its own time.
TJ’s is already a legend that
started this summer
with superb food, a delightful atmosphere and
courteous service, TJ's is waiting for you
Family dining from 5:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.
* T.J.'s Four Soosona Rastauront footuros...*
Doily lunchoon buffot from 11:30 • 3
(...the Baron of Beef is superb)
spocioi Sundoy lunchoon ond dinnor buffots
VICTORIA
SUMMER FESTIVAL
ORCHESTRA
CONCERT IN THE PARK
Baacoa Hill Park—Camaron Band Shall
SUNDAY. AUGUST 22. 2:30 p.m.
LASZLO QATI CONDUCTOR
Guest Soloist; TsuyoshI Tsutsumi
World Famous Cellist
Vocalists: Carolyn Maia
Barbara Coffin
Membsrs of the Sssttle Opers Company
Arranged through tha co-oparation of tha City of Victoria,
tha Truit Fund of tha RaMrding induatrlaa and tha Victoria
Muticiana Aaaociation.
“R.-TAUe
OulragMiu* eonwdy.-
amMy •raUel
RraimniMim byan
•nmetiM caMnd
-M.anypM
IP . . . TALK 7:(
AuaarMl hiitiOt 38? 33/0
8AIIIIE
Sunday lunchoon from 12-4
Sundoy dinnor 4 • 5
Telephone 386-3571
POUR ICASOnS
reitruFrat
634 HUMBOLDT ST., 'in Nootka Court!
Across from the Empress Motet .
SATURDAY, SEPT. 11 1:30PM
ROYAL THEATRE
TICKHS: $5. $S. $7
AvMaMt at Mtmorlal AreiM
Bsx OfRct, MePhtresa PtoyhsuM
Far ktf i r mi ttan Cal: 354-1522
Ai bb If
CKDA 1220
FOLK a BLUES
CABARET
OPENING IN SEPTEMBER
TIrwl e( diwo and loud ■lo e t r lc band*? Looking ter
aomoHiIng dHteront ki Victoria? Haytta a nigMapol adiara
you can earry on a oonvaraalten? H you want to go book to
bootea, mayba MOTHER’S la ter you.
Oulat Hatankig, aaay dancing, good poopto, a ralaxing at-
mo ap baiw. PuN tectSty dining, ot oouraa. Mhalaalppl
Bluaa and Inland FoNi mualc taka oantra alaga liima Umaa
a nigbt Our tecal, proteaalonal antartalnara teatura
acouaUc guitar, bluaa harmonica, ragtimn piano, maybe a
nttte hamboning. H you llko Muddy Walo^ Otis Spann,
Jotwi Loo Hookor, eomo down and aaa our oponkig par-
termanoo, teoturing Don Audat and Richard Bokar.
Thay’ro graat)
OPEN 7 P.M. TO 2 A.M. WED. TO SAT. ONLY
618 JOHNSON STREET
"Most Cuntrovarslil
PLAY of till DECADE’’
Kalaidoacopo praaonta
Patar Shaffor'a
equus
directed by Colin Uorrie
At tin McPtiirson
Sipt. 9-iSii8g.R.
TidmtM.OO. SS.SO.tM.SO
WARNING: some nudity & ex¬
plicit sex.
SAVE on edvanco ticket teles before Aug. 30; cell 353-
5124 or moll coupon and cheque to Equue, 13M-A Oevt.
St, V8W 1Y5.
Name . Phone ...
Address .
Date .
Performance;
. No
1st choice
2nd choice
of Seats
6.50
Saving
.50
6.00 X
5.50
.50
5.06 X
4 50
.50
4.00 X
Amount enclosed
I MorderliyDe^^
H MATURE: some coarse language (R.W. McDonald. B.C. Dir.
MATURE; some coarse language (R.W. McDonald. B.C. Dir.)
MATINEES FRI., SAT., SUN.
1:30, 3:05, 5:05, 7:10, S:10
MON.-THURS. 7:10, 9:10
ODEON 1
1M TATti ITIB1
SHADOW OF THE HAWK
coiuMa* nuiuncs phisents a j>ri keacnt moouciCN
Sl«rng JAN MICHAEL VINCENT. MAfllLVN HASSETT
CHIEF OAN OEOnOE
MATURE
ODEON 2
HU TAtn (Turr
SHOWTIMCS:
1:30, 3:00, 4:55. 7:00, 0:05
I Wsrnlng: A very frightening
picture, some very coarse
language. (R. W. McDonald,
B.C. Dir.)
"YaaaOnga”
Friday, MWnlgM -••7^;.,*^
I Fml'sAT* SUN. Dnnd kyWILUAM FltlEMN
' 2:15, 4:30, 7:00, 0:20
MON.-THURS.. 7:00 « 0:20
HAIDA
«t TATB tmn
WAMPETHBlAm
THE
E)£)RCISr
coiisii:iB Hcts:
CINEMA 2
MATURE OdeJaBSOyJoe
Occasional nudity and coarse 7;06
language (B.C. Director). . 9:2D
“POM POM OIRLS” 7 25
MATURE: some coarse language 4 oc- a'aa
casional nudity. (R.W. McDonald. B.C. Oir.)
MiiiniiMjuMiiMiiiiiiiMHiiiiHiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiHHninniimiiniHmiii
CINIMA
SHOWCASI
AN INCREDIBLE STORY OF
MODERN DAY CANNIBALISM!
imiinnnnninmnnminuinHfmiiitmmniiHiiiiiiiHiHHHiHiiiiiiuwiiiin
GREGORY PECK—LEE REMtCK s
Cl
E SUNDAY AT: 1:30, 3;30, 4:25, 7«6 4 4:15
BsiinUTi V AT- T-M Uil g.^g
SARMMi.
A verv irigfitming ptriurv
• -R W McUonaW.
B (! Dim'tur
g NIGHTLY A T; 7UW L _
ipiss
iiHHwiHltiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiHiiHimimiwBHiiiiiiiiiHiiiiniiiiHiinsiBiiiiiHiii i ii i iii i is
fist****'™
ora iiwMT Evowt
BauauEti.N
■OflKBflY*
i tUNDAT AT: \ M. 1:41. i:ll. 7:21 «8 1:21
= WSKlAYt AT; 7;» mi l;2i
TUScsB valy- 3
TOSSE" I
•ATa-4;N. MOW-SUKI S
rm OskSsyAwMS
IIMNHHMfUHMMNllHHIHIUUINIlflimiilUIIUI
SUNDAY AT;
1:15, 3:35. 4:3f, 7:20 and liM
NIQH’aV ATt 7:20 and 0:20
QINIflAL
IIVIIIIIXIWIIM
Part*
mueiwnaia^lia
tliiiMlA m TNimi 3e7»S MS
RiHHiiiMinMminiiiMiiiiiiiiuiffi1uiiiiuuiiiiiiiiuiilBHldaMwiinwiuilVtSi!iininuMiiinrmiiiiiiiuiuiitniinini'H!^i
1
y
24 # ColoniOt Victoria. R.C., Sunday, .August 22, 1976
vi
M. V. Chesnut’s •
Garden Notes
SKA SAND (8.n.. Tomox)
About the simplest way In
test sea sand for its salt oon-
tent is to taste it with the tip
of your tongue. If It has a pro¬
nounced salty taste, it is unfit
for (garden use.
As a general rule, though. It
is not a good idea to use sea
sand as a dressing (or a laun.
This is not because of its salt
content, which is usually quite
small and unimportant, but
because much of our sea sand
\-ontains ctmsiderahle lime,
and a heavy dresaing would
create conditions favorable to
the growth of weeds^ clover
and coarse meadow grasses,
and unfavorable for the health
of the finer acid-loving lawn
grai^es.
If you have one of those
mexiHjnsive kits for the test¬
ing of acidity or alkalinity of
soil, you can use it to test a
sample of your sea sand. A
reading of pH 6.2 or lower
would make it quite satisfac-'
tory for use cm your lawn.
fiRAPICH AND PEACHKk
(G.8.. Victoria)
Red cheeks are no indica¬
tion of ripeness in peacheit*^
and it is better to go by the
shaded side of the fruit. The
color change here is from
green to yellow as the peach
ripens.
1 don't know of any trust¬
worthy signal or sign that will
indicate when grapes are fully
rljicned. Your best bet is to
try a few from time to time,
and pick when ttie flavor
pleases your particular pal¬
ate.
Some folks Ijke the heavy
sweetness of a fully ripened
grape; others find this cloying
and prefer the sharper flavor
of a slightly under-ripe fruit.
Tile sweeter the grape, the
higher will he the alcoholic
ccmtent of your wine.
GROWTH RETARDANT • (P.
McR., Victoria)
The. chemical used for the
stunting and slowing down the
growth of grass is maleic hy-
drazide, and it created quite a
furore when it first came on
the market under such trade
names as No-Mow, Kem-Kut
and MH-40. A lot rrf lazy gar¬
deners figured they could do
aWay with the cht« of mow¬
ing the lawn simply by spray¬
ing the grass once each sea-
s.m wit this scKsalled miracle
dnig.
Unfortunately, maleic hy-
draztde didn't quite live up to
its claims. It did a fair job of
slowing down the growth
around trees and around lawn
edges where the grass must
be clipped by hand, but it wax
not suitable for over-all lawn
treatment and I doubt If any
dealer stocks it for this pur¬
pose nowadays.
Its principle use now is for
treating potatoes and onions
to keep them from sprouting
in storage, and for this pur¬
pose it is packaged under
such names as RaivSprout
and Potato-PIx. In England it
is being used to slow donvn the
growth of hedges as they re¬
quire less frequent trimming.
HOLLYHOCK RUST (F.G..
Your plants are infected
with hollyhock rust, a parasit¬
ic fungus which causes red¬
dish brown pustules on the
backs of the leaves. 'This trou¬
ble. like the antirrhinum rust
of snapdragons, seems to at¬
tack the older plants, and for
this reason, it is wise to keep
some young stock coming
akmg from seed every year to
replace the overage speci¬
mens.
An attack can sometimes be
checked if you catch it in its
early stages; pick off and
burn all affected leaves and
spray the rest of the plant
weekly with Benomyl fun¬
gicide. tablespoonful per
four quarts of sli^tly aoapy
water, continuing until no fur¬
ther spread of trouble can be
detected.
FIRETHORN ROOTH (J.W.,
(Victoria)
I don’t think you need have
the slightest worry aobuf
damage to your house founda-
tkm from the roots of your
Pyracaniha. This subject has
fibrous roots rather than the
pentrative kind, and the roots
are more inclined to grow
away from the dryness of the
four^tion and walls rather
than into them.
Art
Buchwald
KANSAS erry — Wemed
you all that you would have to
take a teat after the Republi¬
can national cctfivention to
find out if you were watching
it. We will do it under the
West Point honor system
which means no cheating.
'Those who fail the test will
not receive their Betty Ford's
Hiiiband or President bump¬
er sticker.
AH right, let’s go.
1- 'The Repubbean Party is
the party of (aV principle (b)
a balanced budget (cl oi>por-
timity (d) unity (e) .Abraham
Uncoln. Teddy Roosevelt
Dwight Eisenhower afia
What’s-His-Name.
2— 'The Democratic Party is
made up of (a) free spenders
(b) congressmen and senators
who fuel inflation and unem¬
ployment through recldesx
legislation that President
FtX'd in his wisdom and
courage has seen fit to veto
(c) doritooders who have
made your streets unsirfe to
walk in (d) Wayne Hay« and
Elizabeth Ray.
3^ -In order for the United
States to remain number one
in the world we must (a) keep
the Pianama Canal (b) make
our aimed forces so i|trong
that no nation will ever sneer
at us again (c) achieve max¬
imum value for each defence
dollar spent (d) defbJiate all
the peanut farms in Plains,
Ga.
4— Jimmy Carter’s prom-
isee would coat the country
Ca) $100 billion Ob) $207 billion
(c) $300 billion (d) $135.67 for
every man, woman and child
in die United States.
5- -Carter wants the people
to (a) trust him (b)* believe he
was a good governor of Geor¬
gia (e) beiieve he has the ex-
[lerience to deal with the ur¬
gent prottem that beset this
nati.m (d) think he can get
a United Republican Party
that n)se above partisan pdi-
tics in Kansas City by select¬
ing their incumbent president
as their candidate in No¬
vember.
6 - The reason Ronald Rea¬
gan lost^e nomination tight
was ta) he chose his %dre
pre.s-ident too early in the
game (b) Ford could promise
inore things to the uncommit¬
ted delegates (c) Schweiker
<s>uldn't deliver the delegates
tie claimed he had In his
pocket (d) TVmy Oriando
danced with Betty I-Vird ,tust
before the crucial rules vote
on 16C.
7- -Sen. Richard Schweiker
must now go beck to Pennsyl¬
vania and e?qAain to his con¬
stituents that (a) he was only
kidding aibout the right-to-
work law (b) Reagan had his
FBI folder and triackmaoled
him into running csi the ticket
(c) he thought Reagan was of¬
fering Mm a role in a motion
picture (d) he is a "bom
again" liberal.
8— Only one of these Repub¬
licans was mentiemed in a
speech at the convention in
Kansas City: (a) Richard
Nixon tbi Henry Kissinger
(c) Spiro Agnew (d)>
Checkers.
9 Only one of these things
happened in Kansas City: (a)
-Sammy Davis Jr. put his
head on Preeident Ford's
shoulder (b) Charles Cblson
ran over his grandmother in
front of the oemvention hall
(c) Howard Hunt tapped
Rockefeller's telephone (d)
Amy Carter was interviewed
on television (e) the Repubh-
ranx did not have their fists
at Walter Cronkite.
10— 'The Republican dele¬
gates worked titoir tails off at
their convention in Kansa.s
CSty. 'Ute only time they got
any sleep was during (a)
RockefeUer’s ^cc h (b) Oild-
wiiter’s speech (c) Howard
Baker's c^otti (d) John Oon-
nally’s speech (e) all of them.
11— -Vice president Rocke¬
feller in his speech the first
night at the convention said
that one erf the foflowing peo¬
ple played football without a
helmet: (a) KnuteRockne (b>
.loe Namath (c) Alexander
Solzhenitsyn (d> Gerry Ford.
13—The reason that Pres¬
ident Ford did not select
Rockefeller a.x his runniriK
mate was because Rockefeler
said Ford had (a) courage (b)
the ability to pull this country
through its worst polilical
crisis ^nce the’ Civil War (ci
brought respect back to the
office of the presidency (d)
{iuyed footiball without a hel¬
met.
'The final question on your
exam is to write a short esaay
on why more peopde last week
watched Mary Hartman.
Mary Hartman from Fern-
wood than Geny Ford, Gerry
Ford from Kansas City.
Sydney
Harris
My youngest daughter has
begun to learn what every mi¬
nority group quickly finds out
that you are judged (and
condemned) by the worst ele-
mentx of your group.
She was complaining at din¬
ner the other night about the
way lemagers are treated by
most adults in positions of au¬
thority. Having recently be¬
come a teenager herselL she
resent.s being lumped as a
group.
"I supfxwe quite a few kids
my age behave badly.” she
said, "but that’s no excuse for
treiiting all of us as if we did
— es|)ei'iaHy before they know
anything about us ax individu¬
als. That just makes us get
mad and behave worse.”
Khe was talking about
waitresses in restaurants and
clerks in drug or dime stores
"who either treat us as if we
didn't exist, or else keep
guard as if we were all shop¬
lifters and vandals."
She and a few IS-yearold
friends will take a table at a
snack shop and wait 20 min¬
utes for service, while other*
who came later get waited on
much sooner. "I suppose it's
becuase they figure we won’t
order much and won’t leave a
big tip," she says, "but they
charge us the same prices as
they do adults, for rotten ser¬
vice.”
In drug stores, her bill of
cmr^lair^ continues, clerks
wait on other customers even
If youngsters were toere be¬
fore them — and then the
clerks do everything but
shake them down to dete<‘t if
they have done any shoplift¬
ing.
"Sometime* kids get so
mad at that they cop a few
things just to get even.” she
confided, stating in simple
terms what the sociologists
have long called "the theory
of fulfilled expectations.”
That is, if you treat a person
a certain way. he will respond
in a fashion that meets those
(Icav or high) expectations.
All minority groups —
whether \fy age, race, reli¬
gion, or sexual preference —
know that the whole group Is
usually Judged by the moat
t^onspicuous or the most out¬
rageous of its nnembers. even
thwgh they may represent 10
per cent or less of the entire
group. 'Ihe outrageous wies
rail the group to our atten¬
tion. while the 90 per cent who
conduct thwnselves responsi¬
bly just blend into the land¬
scape and we never notire
their minority status.
Discrimination. prejudice
and bigotry of all sorts feed
on this kind of social
blindness •— how many times,
to take a trivial but typical
example, have male motorists
cussed out a bad "woman
drivbr” without even seeing
the dozens of skilled female
drivers around them? We se¬
lect what we want to, or ex¬
pect, or are startled into re¬
cognizing. and blacken out
whatever does not happen to
meet our preconceptions.
My daughter is feeling as a
teenager, and will soon feel as
a woman, what minorities
have always felt and suffer
from — the realization that
even in this most highly "indi¬
vidualistic” of societies, we
are judged less as persons
than as types, and less tm
types than as stereotypes.
Arthur
Hoppe
.'scene: 'Ihe ancient Cha¬
teau Rriand, secret hideaway
of the notorious Uttle Caesar
Salad Mob.
Little Caesar, irhewing a
cigar. Is divvying up the bil-
lion-dollar haul from their lat¬
est ca 4 )er with his fellow
criminals • musclemen
Crunchy Granoda and Artie
(Chokes) Vinaigrette, the
dashing swindler, Beau
Jolaxs. the iittie Japanese cat
burglar. Shrimp Tempura, the
gorgeous moll, Peaches Cling,
and the two elderly fences. Pa
Strami and Ma Caroni.
With a crash, the doi>r
bursts open and there stands
that nemesis of crime, Elliot
(Lock) Ness, tommy gun in
hand.
Peaches (blanching): "Lock
Ness, you monster! "
Ness: "Freeze, you rats!
I've ofluglft you with the
goods thia time.”
little Caesar (leaning back
in his chair and smiling evil-
»vi! "You can’t lay a glove on
UK. Ness. We're incorpo¬
rated."
Ness (lowering his tommy
guni: "Incorporated?”
l.ittle Caesar: "That’s
right, wise guy. We saw the
error of our ways and gave up
liisorganized crime such as
bank .jabs, the numbers rack¬
et and our Happy Hours
While Slave Ring. You are
now speaking to the president
of 'The Little Caesar Salad
Mob, Inc., a duly-c<msitutited
corporation."
Uttle Caesar: Dividends,
Ness. For a modest invest¬
ment of a couple of hundred
gees, we picRed up two
sheiks, a sultan, three pre¬
miers and a former vice pres¬
ident who shall be nameless.
'Hiat enabled us. through tri-
ple-entry bookkeeping to
make a kilting in gas. of). lUbe
Jobs and a counterfeit Ktoaon
jar ring.”
Ness: "You mean, then,
that you’ve turned to . .
Little Caesar (trimphantiy):
‘"lYiat’s fight, Nefts. Cor¬
porate crime!"
Ness (removing his hat):
"I'm sorry, sir, to have both¬
ered you. I didn’t realize you
had become a respectable
businessmem and a pillar 'of
the community."
Peaches (buffing her nails)
"And don’t you fcxget it, cop¬
per."
Ness: "Naturally I won’t fill
yxMi full of feed. But I fear I
must seek a subpoena charg¬
ing you with fraud, bribery,
price fixing, false advertising
and ilfegal campaign contribu-
tkns. You will have to be
punished to the foil extent of
the law."
Little Casar: "What's the
rap, rflattoot?”
Nesa (apotogfticaily): "I'm
afraid you may get as much
as a fine or ten days in
jail. But*I must do my duty."
(Ness backs out the door
and the meb bursts Into
laughter.)
(drinking
champagne from Peachea’
alipfier);
“Always remember, you
guys, unincorporated crime
doesn’t pay!”
PIXies by Wohl
[DD
• SM UK
> tv U"***# ►••lunr
Woodward's Bargain Stores
Household Sale
WABASSO 100% COTTON NO IRON "SIESTA" SHEETS
Bolster your budget with savings on our best selling, first quality Wabasso bedsheets. They're easy<are 100%
cotton you can machine wash and dry without ever needing a touch of the iron. Choose from attractive solids or
patterns in twin, double, or queen size, flat or fitted styles.
SALE PRICES .
Twin
5.99 d«,». 6.77 q....7.88 c»3.33
Flannelette Sheets
Enioy cosy rotnfort by "Texmade" In 65% cotton, 35V*
polyester flannelette. Slight irregularities. In twin,
double sizes, flat or fitted styles. Sale Prices:
6^9 .777
Twin .
Chenille Bedspread
Altraclive machine washable chenille spreads in
a variety of colours. Choose from W, H", hob¬
nail or fancies. Irregulars. Twin or double sizes.
Sale Price..
1-|44
Needlewoven
Spreads
I Durable bedspreads in 88^o acrylic 12V* nylon, take
lots of rough and tumble wear in the kids room, at>
tractive for the guest room. Machine washable. Slight
irregularities. Sale Prices: .
Twin .
q99 1099
. ^ Double I \M
Floor Cushions
A bright and easy way to bring colour and com¬
fort to a room. One side in velour plain, the
I other velour print. Assorted colours. Foam chip
filled. Approx. 22'x22".
Sale Price..
988
Shortie Drapes
I Good value here in an assortment of Shorties. Pretty
I and practical for kitchen, bedrooms, study or den.
Sale Prices:
633 _688
Also available in 48"x45"L. at similar shavings.
48"x54"L.
Floral Comforters
AttraWive bedroom decor plus warmth without
weight\ Covers In 100®^# acetate with 100% polyester
fill and non-slip 65®/o acetate, 15% nylon backing. As¬
sorted colours. Sale Prices:
1944 1C:44
I Double*. I
Twin ..
King and Queen sizes at similar savinfi
Bed Pillows
Buoyant, bouncy pillows and they're washable, too.
Floral rayon covers In assorted colours with 100*/.
polyester fiber fllL.Sak friccs:
*177 466
Petite.Regukr.
King end Queen sizes at sImlUr uvings
Linen Tablecloths
Lovely tabletop fashion at savings in easy care
lOOf. linen. Assorted patterns and colours. Sizt^
approximately 52"x70".
Sale Price..
Bath Sheets
Soft "heavyweights" in thick and abosrbent
100”, 0 cotton terry. Great for beach or bath. Ap¬
prox. 36"x72". Assorted plains. Irregulars.
Sale Price..
Carpets
No need for floors to be bare when you see
these savings. lOO'/o nylon broadloom In assorted
shags, loops, twists, in plains and patterns. Ir¬
regulars. Approx. 9'x12'.
Sale Price..
66’9
Other sizes at similar savings.
100% Polyester Draperies
' draperies with tl
1 assorted coloui
1122 ^ 2273
Wonderfully long-wearing polyester draperies with thermal insulated foam backing to protect against
cold, heat and fadifig. Choose from assorted colours fn prints or plains. Machine washable.
Sale Price.i^s4‘
Size
SwxM'
33 ^
MIotrWi Bargain store
/’(•rso/M/ S/ui/r/i/rt^ ()nl\. \o /i/iotm*, ni.til, or ( .0.1). Ort/rrs. \o /Jr/iiSforr
Ho(/r\: ,).rri.-/J: <0 ft.nt. \fo;K/*n fo itrofrijL'
I III f}.m.
AAONDAY and TUESDAY
Produce & Meat Items Available Aug. 23 & 24 Only.
B.C. GROWN, GRADE CANADA NO. 1
Potatoes ..,s.49«
HAWAIIAN FRESH
Pineapple ...s69^
FLETCHER'S FROZEN, SLICED
Beef liver 69<
FLETCHER'S CRYOVAC
Side Bacon
By the Piece Only
sl 59
WEEK LONG
Bakery & Grocery Items Available Aug. 23 to 28th.
WOODWARD'S BLUEBERRY
Muffins s...85<
WEST VEGETABLE OIL
Margarine l^s
259
BOLD POWDERED
> for your laundry;
Detergent
BOSTON
Corned Beef Loaf
S-lb. ctn.
. 12-oz. tin
794
FLUFfO
shortening
McCORMICKS DELICIA
Cup Cones
Regular or party pack .
CLOVER LEAF
Chunk Light Tuna
NESTEA
Iced Tea Mix
1-lb. ctn. 59^
NORWEGIAN
Jarlsbery Cheese
Random cuts; cryoval .
. lb.
20 cups, 2 for 79^
BOUNCE '
Fabric Softener
g
Ctn. of 20 theeb «
iVi-oz. tin 59^
TILDA
Basmati Rice
S-lb. bag
NAILEY'S
Mayonnaise
16-oz,|«rl
289
65«
Personal Shopping Only. We reserve the right to limit quantities.
Store Hours: 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday to Saturday.
Evening Shopping Thursday and Friday 'til 9:00 p.m.
■p
A)
*
25 ©a(lp^<toloni0t Victona. B.C., Sunday, AugusV 22,
1^76
WOODWARD'S GREAT ONE PRICE SALE DAY - THE ORIGINAL 1.49 DAY
Only First Quality Merchandise Sold in Woodward s Regular Departments No Substandards or Factory Rejects
SORRY, NO DELIVERIES, PHONE. MAIL OR C.O.D. ORDERS PLEASE
Use Your Woodward's
Account Card _
MEN’S FURNISHINGS
MEN'S WOODSONIA T-SHIRTS -
100% cotton, crtw neck. Abort « ja
A iMvtA, whito and colours Each. 1.49
MEN'S WOODSONIA
BRIEFS OR VESTS - 100% a a an
cotton. t far 1,49
VAN HEUSEN BOXER SHORTS - a JO
elastic waist Each. I *49
NYLON ANLE SOCKS -
100% stretch nylon, stretch n i jn
slie fits 10-2. C far 1.49
GLENGARRY ANKLE SOCKS -
ankle length stretch site fits 10-12 ^
MEN'S WOODSONIA
SFORT SOCKS - ankle
length, bright colours, n a JA
stretch size 10-12. b far | ,49
CUSHION SOLE SOCKS - surnmer « an
colours Each. 1.49
MEN'S TERRY HATS > summer « an
colours Each. 1*49
MEN'S WORK SOCKS - 60% wool, « an
40% nylon, size 10*12 Each. | .49
MEN'S GLENGARRY DRESS
SOCKS — over the calf, stretch size a an
<10-12 Each. 1,48
CRAFTUINO
WOODWARD'S 4 RLY AURORA -
3 pfy Acadia or Sports Yarn; approx n « an
1 oz. ball .... 0 fer 1.49
SURER WESTERN - 100% acrylic,
large colour range, approx SO gram n e an
bair.. Z far 1.49
THUNDERBIRD YARN - 4 ply rug and « an
sweater wool, approx 4 oz. ball Each. | .49
ELASTIC RUNNER - aluminum edges; a an
approx 27" x 72" long Each. | .49
WOODEN MILK STOOLS OR BOOK RACK « an
excellent gift ideas Each. 1.49
ROLYFOAM CHIPS - for toys, pit- n 1 JA
lows, etc. approx. Mb. bag.. £ far | .49
UNENSS DOMESTICS
COTTON BEACH TOWELS - bold sum* a an
mer stripes, 27" x S4" Each. | .49
TOWELS — assorted prints and plains, 1 a an
bath or 2 hand or 4 face. 1.49
PRINTED TABLECLOTH approx. 36" X a an
36". 100% cotton Each. 1.49
OISH CLOTHS - basket weye 5 tor 1,49
TEA TOWELS ~ waffle weave, doby lac- a an
quard, satin strips.i.SpefpMk 1.49
JEWELLERY
STERLING SILVER CHARMS - , 1.49
NOTHING CHAIN WITH CHARMS.. 2 far 1.49
RIERCEO BARRINGS - Large assort* a an
ment. 1.49
UMBRELLAS — Prints and plains Each.. 1.49
SOFTIOUE BATH OILS- 2.9 oz. as- n a JA
sorted fragrances. 4 for | .49
CHILD GUIDANCE TOYS - Educational
and fun. An aid in eye, hand, co-ordination
and manual dexterity. Several take-apart a an
and stacking toys to choose from Each.... 1.49
CHOKERS — Metal rope styles or beaded a an
and chain styles. 1.49
BOND TYRING RARER - Yellow n a an
second sheets, your choice. 4 for | .49
UNISEX NECK PIECES - Strung on a an
leather... 1.49
SLAV. NICK lEADS -. 1.49
DIAMOND CUT tRACILCTS- . 1.49
LOCKETS-.:.. 1.49
METAL TASSELS-. 1.49
CLIP.ON EARRINGS.. 2 fw 1.49
GIRLS'FASHIONS
RIt T-SHIRT - am iwek; «l,. RacR 1.49
T-SHIRT - long tiMvn. ill. t-U. Eicli 1.49
SATIN GLO RRIRFS - tin 1-14.... 2 fw 1.49
STRIPED RRIEPS - lorir.l *nd A . jA
cotton slit 1*14. 4fer|,49
KNEE HIGH FANCY STRIPED SOCKS- a an
size 9-10 Bach. 1.49
KNEE HIGHS - cotton and nylon; n a an
size 7*1, 1*9, 9-10. 4 for 1.49
ANKLETS — cotton nylon, size n a an
6-7Vy, M'/e. 4 far 1.49
SHEER RANTY HOSE - fall n a an
colours, size t*l4. 4 for 1.49
TIGHTS — plain, ribbed end diamond; fall a an
colours, size 2-14.pair 1.49
CHILDREN'S WEAR
RIBT-SHIRTS—crewneck, ilitGlrl«'4-6x. « ja
T-SHIRTS — long tiaavts. assorted styles; a an
sizes 2 to 6x Been. . | .49
BUTTON SHOULDER T-SHIRTS - crew a an
neck;' size 2 to 3x Each.... | .49
BOYS'PLAQUE RRONT T-SHIRTS-size a an
4-6x Each. 1.49
JACQUARD rants:- stretch nylon, size 2 a an
to 6x Each ....i... 1.49
BOYS'TERRY ANKLETS - flies n a an
6-7 and 7-1. Z far 1.49
BOYS' BRIERS - sizes 24x, es- n a .n
sorted colours. 4 far 1,49
BOYS'WEAR
BOYS' BRIEFS - S0% cotton 90% « a an
polyester, S.M.L,. 4f6r|.49
MCGREGOR TERRY SOCKS -
choice of colours. Stretch size 7-9 or n a an
9*10 '2 . Z far 1.49
BOYS'SWIM TRUNKS-100% nylon Each 1.49
KNIT SHIRTS - short sleeves Each. 1.49
DRUGS S COSMETICS
WOODWARD'S HEALTH AND BEAUTY
AIDS — Shampoo, 32 oz.; mouthwash, 24
oz.; toothpaste, 100 ml.; rubber gloves, « an
your choice Each.. 1 ,49
COLGATE DENTAL CREAM -2 tubes of a an
100 ml size per peck. 1.49
WILKINS ILADIS - S pw p.ck . 3 IW 1.49
ROSE MILK - 12 oi. Hit EiCII . 1,49
SUAVE EAEY SHAMPOO - 12 Ol.21^1.49
OLD SPICE SHOWER SOAP - iKh. 1.49
ARRID ROLL ON DEODORANT - a . .a
e-TiPS - «n'i ekn. . 1.49
STAY FREE MINI RADS - 10'S... 4«er1.49
FASHION COSMETIC BAGS - EmB 1,49
HOISERY
ASSORTED PRINT AND PLAIN A e aft
SCARVES - 1.49 . 4 far 1.49
KNEE HIGH STOCKINGS - ene a e aA
size fits 9-11 . 4 far 1.49
SLIPPERS -acrylic and terryktach. 1,49
CONTROL TOR PANTYHOSE - smell, a an
average, tall end extra tall Bach .. 1.49
BILLFOLDS - Eacti. 1.49
KEVTAINER AND KEY CASES - EMk 1.49
PANTY HOSE - .11 ihM, rain-
forced toe or regular rainforcad p«i>^ a 1 ja
ty and toe; s.m.l.xl.4 far 1.49
LADIES'SUPPORT HOSE - iKh. 1,49
SIZED STOCKINGS - . 3 Itr 1.49
DRAPERIES
4S" POLYESTER PLAIN SHEERS - and • ja
open weaves.yard 1.49
RE-WEB KITS — replace old webbing with a jn
new assorted sumntar colours; 32 ft. Each | .49
ROLYFOAM CUSHION FORMS - a e ja
14" round or square 2" thick. 4 far | .49
45" POLYESTER PRINTS - assorted a an
colours.yerd 1,49
41" BURLAP - 100% Jute, assorted a jn
colours.yerd 1.^9
45"PRINTS-widerangeofco1oufs. ..yard 1,49
COTTON SATEEN LINING -as/ a ja
in Ivory or white. I 71 yds. 1,49
DECORATOR CUSHIONS - various a jn
colours and fabrics Each. | ,49
FABRICS
THREAD - Q t JA
300 yard spool.0 fdr 1.49
CUT LENGTHS - fashion fabrics Each... 1.49
CUSHION HANDLE SCISSORS - 7 " a ja
straight Bach. 1.49
INTERFACING - approx V/9 yards, 100% a jn
polyester Bach. 1.49
LINGERIE
BRIERS — white, nude, assorted a e ja
pastels S.M.L. Z fer | .49
BIKINIS —white,nudeandessorted n e ja
prints end plains s.m.I.' 4 for 1.49
O.S. BRIERS — in white and as* n a jn
sorted psstels... 4 fer 1,49
INFANTS'WEAR
INFANTS' T-SHIRTS - assorted styles, a ja
long sleeves, 12-24 mths Rach. 1.49
INFANT STRETCH NYLON SLEEPERS a jn
- 12-24 mths. Bach. 1.49
INFANT STRETCH TERRY SLEEPERS a jn
- 12-24 mths. Each. 1.49
UMBRELLAS - prints and
plains Each.
TUESDAY
HQUSEWARES
LIGHT GLOBES-Canadian made, n a ja
frosted, non glare; 40, 60, 100 watt. 9 fir 1.49
STEAK BOARDS - . 1.49
WALL PLAQUES - colourful end a ja
' decorative Bjdi. 1.49
CLEANING AIDS - your choice Of sot*
sweep broom, corn broom or push broom a jn
Each...S. 1.49
COOKING AIDS — your choice of cast iron
trypan 12" wok; open saucepan, 7"
aluminum frypan, stainless steal vegetable
steamer, or 3 pee. aluminum saucepan sat a jn
Each. 1,49
PAD AND COVER — for standard ironing a an
boards Each. 1.49
PLASTIC HOUSEWARES -your choice of
utility tub, toilet brush set, wastebasket, a jn
dish drainer, or pail Each. | .49
BAKEWARE - non stick loaf pan, muHin a ja
pan or cake pan Each. 1.49
THEHMOS BOTTLE - Each. 1.49
LAP TEAY - Each. 1.49
GAEBAGE BAGS - pkt. of 30. .1.49
GARDEN TORCH — light up backyard a ja
parties Each. 1.49
CHINA
STACKING MUGS OR CEREAL j e JA
BOWLS -. 4 for 1.49
GLASS ASHTEAY - Each.1,49
STOEAGE JAE - Each. 1.49
TUMBLERS — choose hi ball or old t% a jo
fashion. a fer 1,49
BEER TANKARD -. 2 for 1.49
^UBY STEMWARE-choice Of Old a 1 JA
'fashioned, wine, liqueur or sherry., g fer I.Ra
PKT OP TAPEEED CANDLES - Each. 1.49
MINIATURES — Brass and copper a a
plated. 9 for 1.49
GLASSES—choose roly poly, hi ball, old a ja
fashion m sets ot 4. 1.49
KAHLA DINNERWARE - dinnerplate,
soup plate, cup and saucer, cream, sugar, a ja
open vagatablt or platter Each. | ,49
SALAD PLATE -. 2 fir 1,49
FRUIT OISH OR BREAD AND a a ja
GUTTER - . 9 fer 1.49
STAINLESS STEEL BUTTER DISH. 1 ,49
FLOOR COVERINeS
PLASTIC RUG PROTECTOR - clear,
claatad vinyl protect rungs and carpets; a ja
approx 29" wide.2 lln. ft. 1,49
WELCOME DOOR MATE - black rubber, a ja
ribbed styling; approx I4"x20" Each. 1.49
OOUGLB FACE TAPE - 1''1i"x4
yards, per roll; ideal for Installing a e ja
rugs, mats, etc.. 4 for I .Bo
STRIPED NYLON MAT - for Inside or
outside use, candy stripe dessing; epprox a ja
23"x34" Each. 1.49
SCHGOL SUPPLIES
WOODWARD'S REFILLS -
Standard 3 hole, narrow col¬
lege. wide, or plain, your a a ja
choice.. Z fer 1.49
WOODWARD'S ASSIGN¬
MENT COVERS - assorted a a ja
colours per pack. C fir 1.49
WOODWARD'S EXERCISE
BOOKS — 5 books of 32 pages
or 3 books of 72 pages per *a a ja
pack, your choice. 4 for 1,49
WOODWARD'S HB PEN- A a ja
CILS - IS pencils per pack. 4 fer | .49
PENCIL CRAYON POUCH-20 per a ja
pack Each. | .49
KEY TABS - wide or nar- a a ja
row, 3 books par pack. 4 fer | ,49
RING BINDERS - I" size. 2 <m 1.49
RING GINDERS - 11^" silt Etch ...1«49
SCOTCH TAPE -'/^"X 1010" c a ja
per roll... 9 fer | .49
LIQUID CRAYONS - .20 per peck a ja
Eech. 1.49
WOODWARD'S STICK a a ja
PENS - 9 per pack. 4 for 1.49
PARKER BALL POINT PEN - « JA
STATIONERY
PLAYING CARDS - plastic A a ja
coated with picture back. 4 fer | .BB
WRITING PADS - large j a ja
economy size.. 4 for | ,49
PHOTO ALBUMS - one touch type a ja
Each. 1.49
PHOTO ALBUM REFILLS A 1 JA
— 4 pages per pack. £ fer | .49
APPLIANCES
FRE RECORDED • TRACK TAPES - a jA
VACUUM BAGS - to tit Eureka a « ja
H oover or Lewyt. g for | .49
VACUUM BAGS-to fit Regina. Each. 1.49
OMEGA TAPE HEAD CLEANER a a ja
— with swabs. 4 for 1.49
WARNER BROS. LP'S . 1,49
PAINT
PAINT BRUSHES - W. 2", 2W. 3" i jA
ROLLER SET — 7*'^" mohair roller and a ja
handle; 3" iunlor roller with metal tray. sat | ,49
PLASTIC SHEET - I'xlO', 1 mil .. 3 fir 1.49
PLASTIC SHEET - 10'x12', 2 mil a ja
PAINT THINNER - plastic jug, 1 gallon 1.49
TOYS
STEEL TRUCKS — heavy gauge trucks,
choose from dump, wreckers or cement a ja
truck Bach. 1.49
LEGO 99 PCS SET — one Of the biggest
names In building toys; a good add on or a ja
starter sat. 1*49
COTTIE GAME - a game jf skill, im- a ja
agination for the younger set Each. | .4B
^BUGALOOS GAME—a fun game of cap- a ja
^ ture and ralaasa tor children 9-12. Each... | .49
SUPER STARS GAME-action packed a ja
game full of fun. Each. 1.49
JUMBOCOLOURING BOOKS-includes 2 a ja
jumbo books and crayons.set 1.49
KITTY AND PUPPY PUZZLES - for
younger puzzle enthusiasts, a good selec- ^
CAMERAS
PHOTO FRAMES - good quality A. f JA
metal framts, iWtV'r' or 3t^"xS".. £ fw 1.49
PHOTO FRAMES - 5"x7" or r'xlO". 1.49
V HARDWARE
ADJUSTABLE WRENCH - 6" length a ja
POTTING SOIL - Sterilized 25 lb. bag .... 1,49
MEASURING TAPE - 10 ft. retractable . 1,49
UTILITY KNIFE — many uses around a Xa*
home. 1,49
GARDEN 'GLOVES - ladies’ or men's a ja
your choice.. 1.49
WOODWARD'S FISH FERTILIZER - 0 JA
100% orgenic promotes growth. 64 oz. size 1.49
FOLDING FENCE-10 gauge, 6' length, a jq
green baked enamel finish.. 1.49
DOLLS Y - easily moves heavy appliances 1.49
LAWN SPRINKLER - for your garden... 1.49
GRASS SHEARS — tor border trimming.. 1,49
CEDAR TUBS-10" octagonal with plastic a ja
bands... 1.49
HOSE - 7/16x40' plastic Bach.' 1,49
WOOD CHISELS - W. w and 1" Bach 1,49
SHELF BRACKETS. Sat 1.49
SPORTING GOODS
GOLF BALLS — Canadian made... 3 balls 1,49
SWIM SNORKEL - for underwatar tun... 1.49
INDOOR SHUTTLECOCK - tuba bf 6. 1.49
' I
BIKE TIRES - 20 xlH, 20x 1.75, 24 x 1%, a ja
26X 1%, 27 X 1'/4 . 1,49
COLEMAN ICE SUB — for your a a ja
camp cooler. . . £ for 1,49
PLASTIC TA.P - ApprOK. 9'xlJ'. 1,49
TENNIS RACOUKT - tor th* bepimwr ... ' f ,49
PLASHLIOHT—with locus bulb.1.49
SNOPPINO iAC OR SPORT .AO -. 1.49
HOCKEY STICKS - IMH and rights. 1,49
AUTOMOTIVE
WEDOE CUSHION - IS" x IS". 1.49
PLAT CUSHION - port.bl. comfort. 1,49
seUEESEE - plastic handio. 1,49
WINDSHIELD SOLVENT-pramlxad gal- ^
FLARES-.plig.sl3.1.49
ZIP WAX SPONGE - with turfla n s An
FLOOR MATS - black only. 2 far 1,49
VALVOLINE OIL - 5 30, or 30 30 . 2 far 1.49
HAND SPOTLIGHT - 12 volt, plug Into a ja
lighter... . |,49
KOOL CUSHION-eir flow keepi you cool 1.49
FLASHLIGHT AND BATTERIES - for a ja
home and auto Each.. | ,49
HOME ACCESSORIES
WOOD PICTURE PLAGUES - aiwrted a ja
subjacts Each.. 1.49
FRAMED PICTURES - Each.. 1.49
CEILING FIXTURES - complttt with a ja
Shade Each... 1.49
GANONGSJUJUBES-lelllasand a a ja
jumbo gumt. 1 lb. . Z Mr 1.49
ALMOND ROQA - 12 oz. tubs Bach. 1,49
PAULINE JOHNSON SNOW BALLS - t a ja
lb. Bach. 1,49
JOHNSONS CASHEWS - 12-OZ. box Bach 1,49
FOOD FLOOR
POLAR PAK FRUIT
FLAVORED DRINKS - • fl.
CATELLI MACARONI DIN¬
NER — with chaese; 7',<i-oc.
ctn.
SUN RAY TOMATOES -
standard; 28 - fl. oz. tins.
DARES BISCUITS - as¬
sorted varieties..
ISmrl.AS
8 far 1,49
4l.r1.49
2f.r1.49
9 far 1.49
.JELL.D JELLY PDWOERS
^ assorted, 3 oz. pkt.
CHNfilOERS FROZEN
MEAT PIES - beef,
chicken. Pork or Steek; 2-4 ^ a ja
oz. pies per pkt. J pkjs. 1.49
PRODUCE
CALIFORNIA SUNKIST A a ja
VALENCIA ORANGES - .0 dez. 1.49
WASHINGTON
GROWN GOLDEN
DELICIOUS APPLES aa a jn
- tancygrade. OUfer 1.49
CANDY — Methol, eucalyptus, stars
and stripts and star spanglad mints, a ja
2-ib. bag, mixad Ea^...”. 1.49
TROPICAL PLANTS - V/»
Inch pot.
4fw1.49
BAKERY
DATE NUT LOAF -
Madeira Loaf, 1 Appit
Struedel, 1 Jelly roll; Your a a ja
choice any. Z for 1.49
MEAT
FROZEN PORK CHOPS - 14 01. a ja
B.C. GROWN FROZEN PRYING
CHICKEN - braisH or lags. 1-lb. 2 a ja
oz. pkt. Bach a........;... 1,49
SNACKBRY PIZZAS - pap-
peroni, salami or mushroom, a a ja
FROZEN - ^ t lb. pkts Regular
quality Ground Beef and 1 pkt. of 8 a ja
H amburger Runs all for. | ,49
JIVE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
V
Section 3
Sunday, August 22, 1976
Page 27
TRAVEL
Rowboat again rules Campbell River Tyee Pool
Merriman eats crow today
~ and I am enjoying every
morsei of it.
On Aug. 6. 1960. following a
fishing trip to Campbell
River’s famed Tyee Pool. I
wrote that the rowboat ap-
))eared doomed in those
waters — its last stixHvghold
and suggested the Tyee
Club of British Columbia
should amend its rules to In¬
clude fish caught from motor-
huata.
I visited that same T>'ee
Pooi last weeicend and fo^d
it crowded with many more
rowboats than there had been
16 years before — the rowboat
\vas again ruler of the Tyee
Pool and motoiboats were
crowded to the outside per-
imeteia. ^
The man mainly responsible
for this rejuvenation <rf row¬
boat tyee fishing is Dr. Rich¬
ard Murphy, who has reigned
as president ^ the club since
1966.
He fbund a way to take a
mold from the old wooden
clinker-built tyee boats that
were quickly beewning ex¬
tinct as building them became
a dying art. Now he turns
them out in fibreglass as a
hobby and they are quickly
grabbed up by Camxibell
River’s keen local fishermen.
1 was happy to see the row-
boats back. After ail I learned
to fish from a clinkerbuilt
^Colonist photo bv Aloe Morrlmin
Roteboaters fish Campbell River's Tyee Pool — in foreground Dr. Richard Murphy and udfe, Mary
rowboat way back in the late
19208 and early 19306 when we
used to row in the fast ttde-
JPI
ann
landers
Dear Ann T^andera: A great
deal of professional counsel,
as well as a unique and spe¬
cial kind .of parental love,
were requited before we were
able to accept our son’s homo¬
sexuality.
Ha lives with his "friend’*
in a nearby city and they visit
us frequently. We likt hia
"friend" very much and ha>e
triad to make him feel wrt-
emne in our home. The prob- ^
lem is that they hold hands,
caress one another, and some¬
times even kiss in the pre¬
sence of our friends, neigh-
hors and relatives.
My husband and I have
learned to accept this, but it
does make others uncomfort¬
able. We’ve heard critical
comments and \inkind re¬
marks about our eon’s life¬
style and has "ouliarwtish" be-
haviw with his "lov’er."
Asking him to visit us alone
In the future would certaWy
bring about the alienation we
have tried so hard to avoid. Is
there a solution ?— Parents.
Dear parents: People of
good taste keep their hands
off each other in the presence
of others — heterosexuals as
well as homosexuals. If your
son isn’t aware of thi^ you
ought to tell him. If you’re
afraid to, hand him thi» col¬
umn. I’m not.
Dear Ann T..atiderK: I am a
62-year-old grandmother, in
coTmJlete agreement with
Santa Fe’s three sons — the
jtxmg men who were turned
off by nxxlem medicine. I say
Nature will heal anything in
time, with a little patience.
These modern-day doctors
are only experimenting. They
don’t know nearly as much as
pet^le give them credit for.
.\lso, their fees, are a dis¬
grace. How can they associate
life and death with money?
ril bet you don’t print this
letter because of the pressure
you will undoubtedly receive
from your medical cwisul-
tants. Time will tell. — Rx-
Nurse.
Dear Ex: It has been known
for some time that certain
diseases are self-limiting
which means if you do noth¬
ing they will disappear with¬
out treatment. (The common
erdd Is the beat exampde.)
Howevn-, I hope you won't
count on "time and patience"
if you should have a ruptured
appendix:, or high blood pres-
aure, or diabetM, or breast
cancer. These are just a tow
of the iMdieel probtems ttiM
e doctor CAN do something
about
Of ekurse phorttcians’ toes
are high. Whirt isn’t? As an
ex-nurse, check and see what
your emphyed ooUeeguea are
making per hour.
People 9IOULO be paid tor
their labor, aod salaries must
keep up with the cost of liv¬
ing, which is out of sight. If
you know cf a sdution to tiie
problem called "inflation"
write.
Dear Ann landers: Our
son's wife gave blrth.to a son.
Before the child was bom I
wrote and asked them to in¬
clude my maiden name on the
birth certificate.
I explained it would serve
only as a record, that they
could call the child by any
name they chose, !^ty father
who pa«^ away a few years
ago lost four sons — two in
the Second World War. He
was the last to carry the
name.
My son and his wife let me
kr^ they felt I was "pre¬
sumptuous," that I should not
have had the nerve to ask
such a favor. They refused to
honor my request. Was I o<>t
of line? If you say so. I’ll
apologize. — L.S.S.
Dear LS.».: You were NOT
out of line. They were.
New Concorde
flights planned
PARIS (UPI) — Air France
has announced plans for regu¬
lar Paris-Washington-Mexico
City flights of its SST jetliner
Concorde. Air »ance said a
single supersonic fhght from
Paris to Mexico Qty would
cost J940.
ripa around Trial Island
and Qover Point and we
knew just how to make the
tides and the bade eddies
woric for US to catch those
salmon.
We camped on Campbell
River’s TVae Spit way back in
1960 and we registered our
tackle with the Qub and
set out to row the vMxxlen
planer-hull boat we used at
that time. But. H wasn’t a
j^oWbo a t. really. We rowed tor
a couple of hundred yards and
gave it up as a bad job.
We counted 50 motorboats
and six rowboats fishing the
Tyee Pool then. The reverse
was true last weekend.
The Aral clWcer^iuiM tyee
rowboats originated with E.P.
Palntn* In 1922 and he made
them on the Tyee Spit.
'In I'S flimi built caMns
on the site of the existing
painter’s I^Klge and moved
his boat-buUding business
there until IMO. when war
years (nought a temporary’
halt to Ms boat-building activ¬
ities.
In 19M he sold Paintor's
Lodge, but he continued to
build tyee rowboats to 1954
and he was constantly Im¬
proving them. Hw first row¬
boats were doubto-enders, but
when outboards clone he built
them with a wine-atem tran¬
som to hold a small outboard.
But the outboards were only
to get to the fishing grounds.
He built them basically for
rowing and he built them very
low in the water without too
much freeboard.
That was so ari angler could
roll the big 30 to €0-pound tyee
salmon over the gunwales in-
Mead of having to lift the big
fish, like the motoeboats have
to.
He also built the boats with
a good keel so they wcaild
track V’eil and wouldn’t fish¬
tail in the cross tides.
He built them of native red
cedar planking, which he cut
himself and he made his own
spoon oars.
By 1974 the old wooden
Painter-built rowboats were
getting in a sad state of disre¬
pair. They were becoming
fewer and fewer and no more
were being built. Painter’s
liOdge, which once had 60
rowboats got down to about
four.
Murphy rebuilt several of
the old boats and fibreglassed
some of them, which made
them pretty heavy.
In 1974. with the help of the
elder Painter’s son. Joe. he
made a m<^d from one of the
last 1934 boats and that be¬
came his female mold, from
Coiffure
Introducing
Brent Shadforth
Brent is from Coventry, England and has
recently joined our staff. He looks forward
to assistinjg Victoria women with their hair
care nee<K;
Hair Styling
Coloring . ^
Perming
General Hair Care
1912 RICHMOND AVE 595-3434
i-2l
outdoors
alec . .d
merriman
which he now turns out his
ail-fibregiass lapstrake shells.
He finishes them with mahog¬
any seats and mahogany gun-
whales.
Ernie LilAum. who used to
help E. P. Painter, is now
m^ng theapoon oars.
Murphy juM .made one boat
in 1974 and he used it that
year, to 1975 he made 13 and
in 1976 he has made eight.
The rmvboat is on its way
back to the Tyee Pool.
The old toiRMlen boats
weiglied 175 pounds dry and
the gtoMk boass weigh 175
pnurxls. But the wooden boats
added more weight after they
had been in the water awhile.
The nbreglass boats ai'e
just as stable as the wooden
boats In the water and be¬
cause there is less friction
they TOW a little easier. They
require very little upkeep.
They aren’t cheap, lunning
around S8(X}.
Murphy only builds for his
friends and he has successful¬
ly been converting local
Campbell River anglers back
to using rowboats in the TVee
Pool.
At one time rowboat fishing
was mainly done by rich
Americans who hired a guide
to row them.
Now It is mainly the locals
who enjoy rowing a friend
and fishing as a team. 'The
oarsman extends all his cort-
centratlon on rowing. He
doesn’t fish, but he does more
to catch and land the fish
than the actual angler.
"The rowboats are \'ery
successful for salmon fishing.
The fish are timid, in shallow
water, and you can sneak up
on them," says Murphy. ’W ]
good man on oars ^11 kist
about hook and even tielp in
the playing of the fish." he
explains.
One of the big advantages la
that a chosen piece of wrater
can hold more rowboats than
})owerboats and th hot spot in
the Tyee Pool is very small.
As soon as a fish is hooked
and they hear a reel start to
ving, anglers In otfier boats
reel in quickly and the boat
with the fish on moves out of
the pool, so the other anglers
start fishing again and
take advantage of what proi>
ably is a short bite period.
'Ihe rowtxnt oflers lees re¬
sistance to a hooked fish arxl
the big ones can tow a row¬
boat for some distance with¬
out breaking the fishing Hne.
wihleh under tyee regulatians
Is 20-poijtxl-te8t, or less.
Murphy's biggest fish was
In 19^ before ht became
club president — a 6&-
pounder.
"I spend much more time
rowing my wife, Mary, than I
do fishing," he said. "I don’t
know how mamr tyee (a Chin¬
ook 30 pounds or heavier) she
has caught, but ft is a great
many," he aays.
Her heaviest fish was a 48-
pounder, but last Saturday
she landed a 43-pounder and
on Sunday evening gave a re¬
peat performance with a 40-
pounder.
TUESDAY,
AUG. 24TH
DAY
CHOCOLATE
BARS
Your choice
Reg. 30* each
MAYFAIR SHOPPING CENTRE
1/2 PRICE
Sportswear
Dresses
Pant Suits
Available in our Dress Department
yiait Saba*K today!
Use your Saba Charge Card, Ctaargex or MasterCharge-
Up until Wednesday there
had been 15 fish weighed into
the Tyee QUb on regulation
tackle this year, heaviest 45H
pounds.
Last year 58 tyee were
weighed into the club, which
was a small year which saw
rough fishing, weather move
in during the peak fishing
time, which mi^t tave done
a lot good for axiservation.
An average season now pro¬
duces 75 to 80 clUb-registered
tyee during the July 15 to
Sept. 15 season.
In 1965 some 298 tyee.
weighing 12,361 pounds were
wei gh ed tnto dito competi¬
tion. They came the power¬
boats and by 1959 some
thought was being given to
tohl ii ^ the TVee Gub, but per-
serverance wtm out and now
the resurgence of interest is
rebuilding.
Heaviest club tyee was a 71-
pounder taken Aug. 6,1968, by
Walter Shutts of Oregon.
Regulations have changed
slightly over the years.
Tackle qualification now re¬
quire 20-pound-teBt or lighter
line, with no other classes,
and treble hocks are now
aHowed provided they are
fished with a single action
red. witiiout a drag. A Peetz-
type red qualifies.
The club headquarters at
the tip of the TyM Spit has
DOW gone, having been taken
over by a trailer camp, large¬
ly filled by Americans.
But, ihw is another trailer
eamp next door, which is more
open to transienbi, and there
is a con c rete boat launching
ramp at the Spft.
The Tyee Qub headquarters
is now on the inshore side of
the Spit by Okanagan Heli¬
copters.
^noe 1^4 the club has re¬
corded 1.300 me m ber s and 100
to 150 ot them actively fish
each year.
"I am delighted to see the
local people taking an inter¬
est. Good fishermen, who
have fished out of powerboats
now ask me when ti)ey can
get a rowboat," sa^s Murphy.
EATON'S
bare up
beautifully
whatever the occasion or
time of the year, if a
growth of hair standa
between you and your first
Summer party, start now
to do something about it.
Our Electologiat can
remove every last botho'-
some hair ... she can do It
safely, gently and for
always. Call our beauty
salon today for your fr«t
consultation. Our Kre*
Method of Permanent hair
removal Is the ultimate.
You'll be able to bare up
beautifully!
Esim'r BcaMy Si tot
Fifth Ftaw
1130 Douglas
• 384-0561
the return
of the dress ...
is a return to elegance.
A return to the ladylike
1 proportions of earlier years.
But the ease-of-fit, the
ease-of-care is every
beautiful inch today’s
Come try — this — and
hundreds of other flatterers!
—for day, for night.
1t19 DOilOLAt
FASHIONS
Lb# your Cft#rp#x, MaafrChargo, or our rrtortdiy Torm$
Pr— porktng bohfnd our otorol
28 ColOlU0t Viclond, E.C, iiundd>. August 22, 1376
With DOROTHY FRASER
Stunning European Imports ...
When it comes to clothes. .. there s precious little that’s real- ,
ly exclusive nowadays ... at any price. . . But definitely nowhere
else in Victoria will you find a duplicate of the very beautiful In¬
dian print chiffon dinner dress by Vali, of Paris, which we ad¬
mired at Gibson's this week! . . . A brilliant orange and pird( print
on a black background . . . it’s a two-piece style with very fitted
bodice and full sleeves, and has its own chiffon square ^arf. . .
One only, in a size 10 . . . and a similar style in a brilliant blue
print on black is a 12. . . Similarlv exclusive is an exciting French
perfume bv this same designer. Vali. . . Bottles m (^Uarier. half.
andQ5S1>MRP?size8 nestle in the heart of a crystal-clear lucite cube
which can later be used to enclose perhaps a flower. . for a very
decorative ornament... A mere whiff of this new Vali fragrance
will wait you into heaven! . . . Back to fashions . . we saw
another dinner dress in a very fine wool print by Mr. John
Couturier of Italy . . . A beige-grey mottled print cut on Empire
lines with soft skirt... If you wear a size 14 or 16. you'll find this
very elegant and sylph-making! . . A new restaurant dress in a
cream and camel blurred print is simplicity itself . . . Soft midi
skirt fitted over the hips, envelope neck and slim sleeves . . Look
closely and you’ll discover a lovely sleek tiger on the skirt front
. . . enough in itself to provide a fascinating topic of conversation!
Same delightful style in a brilliant blue with grey and brown,
at . . . Glbsoo^s, 708 View St.. 384-5913.
You can build a T-strap shoe wardrobe about as extensive as
your collection of T-shirts!
Treasures of all sorts at the Handloom . . .
Wondered what all the excitement was about when we noticed
a group of out-of-towners huddled around the Kadian Craft wood
carvings in the Handloom the other day . . . Discovered the carv¬
ings are of bears . . one with a fish in its mouth . . . another
lumbering along in its ursine way . . . and a third ... so beautiful¬
ly done that every hair stands out. . standing on a rocky base.
^ch of these is a collector's item! ... We noticed some sturdy
. . . and very chic . . . catalogue tote bags which we thought would
be perfect for school and college because they're so sturdy and
hai^-wearing, and will carry books along with a girl's personal im-
p^menta ... An outside pocket takes care of the latter
Handloom ^s a good supply of Cottage Craft kits. . . Hand-woven
skirt length with enough matching yam for a sweater
Something like 20 colors and two different weights . . Some
beautiful hand-knit sweaters in this same Cottage Craft yam,
made especially to Handloom s order:.. Nice and easy for gift¬
mailing are the hand-woven pillow covers . . Interesting tex¬
tures. in colors to suit most oecors . . Also complete made-up
woven pillows .. . When you're in Handloom don't fail to look at
their batik English leather handbags . .. Green, blue or brown
with different color accents . . . zipped across the top, with
shoulder strap . ■ . And if you’re a miniature collector . .
Handloom has some delightful miniature Jars and vases ... not to
mention a whole menagerie of hand-blown glass animals!
Handloom, 625 Trounce Aliev, 384-1011, and Empress Hotel. 384-
1518.
Labor Day weekend
Oregon Open comes next
Paul Coxe is a ieading amateur
By RAY KERR
Csiftnist Chest Writer
Things may be deathly
quiet on the B.C. Oiese Fed¬
eration front, but when it
comes to Pacific Northwest
chess as a whole, there's
plenty to do.
I hear tlial a number of
players from B.C. is getting
ready for the first big tour¬
nament of the new season, the
Oregpn Open near Portland
during the l^bor Day week¬
end. Sept. 4-6.
Organized by the brilliant
Oregon TD Clay KcUeher. the
six-round, Jl.TW guaranteed-
prize event will be played at
Mount Hood Community Col¬
lege in Gresham, only 13
miles east of Portland city
centre. There will be two
rounds on each of the three
playing days, with the rounds
at 9 a m. and 3 p.m. on the
final day to allow early depar¬
ture for out-of-towners.
Entry fee at the site is $18
plus USCF mmnbership and
there are excellent prizes in
all 8«ti<»w. Registration at
the site runs 8:30-10 a.m.,
Sept. 4. a Saturday.
Certainly an exc^ent event
to open the season in the
Northwest.
While on the subject of
Northwest tournaments. B.C.
Checkmate
player.s .should .stall making
plans now for the huge
Northwest Christmas
Congress in Seattle.
This fabulous holiday chess
jamboree is scheduled for
Dec. 27-29. and is being or¬
ganized by Robert Karch of
Seattle, who together with
Clay Kelleher. is the best TD
in (he Northwest.
Now this event, tailor-made
for such B.C. amateurs as
Paul Gtme of Vancouver.
Richard • Jeanpierre of Vic¬
toria and Gerry Forbes of
Port Aibeml, to just mention
a few, has got a little bit for
everybody.
It has an invitational pre¬
mier section, which will be
strictly up to Karch and will
feature the best from the
Northwest.
Tt then has an'Amateur sec¬
tion. for those rated 1800-2099:
Booster. for ratmgs of
1500-1799, and Progressive,
frwn 1499 and all the way
down to unrated. In each sec¬
tion. there are prizes of $400.
$150. $100 and $50.
However, there's also the
19 7 6 Northwest Student.s
Chess Championship ojjen to
ALI.. Northwest schools, with
a student team speed event on
Dec. 28. junior high school
chamTOonship <(^n to all
those in Grade 9 or belowi on*
Dec. 29. and elementai'y
schools tournament (Grade 6
or lower) also Dec. 29.
.Sounds like a perfect event
for the many Greater Victoria
schools with excellent prrv
grams, and I suggest their
sponsors write as early a.s
possible for details to Robert
Karch. P.O. Box 88217. Tukw-i-
la Branch. Seattle. Washing¬
ton 98188, U.S. Same goes for
all others interested in play¬
ing and obtaining all the par-
iculars'.
Meanwhile, all chess
players are getting^ their
books ready to study for the
c(Mning seaaon.
Among the best put out any¬
where are those by Dover
Publications, and in particu¬
lar a number I have received
recently.
The hook 50(i Master Garner
by Tartakower has to be fei;-
"Doeskio" jacket goes with everything . . .
We d have sworn it was the finest of doeskin . . . that Paul
Rogers tucked shirt jacket they showed us at Impacts n Imports
last Mcmday ■ . and accustomed as we are to seeing things which
are other than they seem ... we found it hard to brieve this lux¬
urious stuff is reallv a man-made fabric! ... We love the way it's
cut. . . and its lively chocolate brown shade has a chameleon-like
property in that it seems to blend with everything regardless ol
color! . . . For instance, there are Kinlock Anderson pure wool
skirts from Scotland which might have been made esp^ially for
this jacket ... to form a smart, casual suit . . . One style in a
brown check tweed with a touch of rust... cut straight with in¬
verted fremt pleat ... the other a flared skirt in brown and rust
check . . . and believe it or not. this same skirt in gold and black
looks equally at home with the brown jacket! . . . These really
smart skirts are priced from $45 to $75 . . . As for the jacket. .
fully lined, and washable . .. it's tagged at $100 . .. and we've a
hunch could well prove to be the best $100 you've ever spent! . . .
We hear that some new pants and skirts are due in any ^y now
made from a new material called 'Chamere” ... a
cashmere-textured blend which .. . who knows? . . . might fool us
into thinking they’re cashmere! ... Pants will sell for $55 . .
Skirts, $50 . . . These sound great for wearing with blouses and
sweaters . .. Impacts ’s' Imports, 8 Centennial Square, 388-7023.
STAMP PACKET
Magazine prospects good
CHRIS WOOTTON
previously at the Cutting Bench
has returned from Europe and
la now at
MR. B*Z
In NOOTKA COURT
3t5.M21
B> I.ESLiB DREW
Colonist Staff
Apart from philatelic soci¬
ety publications, stamp maga¬
zines in Canada haven’t been
noted for being long-lived.
Thi.« .«;hould surprise no one.
contudering the perils of only
one small production aspect
the proofreading of the
long columns of price quota¬
tions in the ads.
Now, ho^^ever.■ Canadian
Stamp News is on the markel,
a tabloid f)uhhshed every
other week al 1567 Sedles-
U.S. stars and socialites are going crazy over "attic
treasures" in the'shape of old clothes of the 20 s. 30 s and 40 s.
Easy walking in Italian Bandolioot ...
If you'd like a really good imported walking shoe . in a
medium price range ... we suggest you pay an early visit to Mun-
day's and try cm some of their newly-arrived Bandolino shoes frmn
lUuy . .. These are well-fitting, softly pliable shoes that will make
your walking easy and comfortable ... as well as looking smart
^ and well-bred, and complementing your pant suits and casual
. wear to perfection! ... All the patterns are new this year . . .
There's a nice little loafer called incanto ’... in navy or brown
calf with leather sole and low stacked heel.. . priced at $30 . . .
Anoth^ loafer has the same name for some reason, but it's a
: wedge with crepe sole, and comes in rust or brown suede, at $28
*. . . "Timo," in black or brown calf, has a moccasin vamp and
: slightly higher stacked heel... Its intriguing Gucci-type trim has
’ * a Uny Bandolino nameplate! .. . $33. . . For a little dressier walk-
'-ing ^oe, try "Talco ' . . . Tan or navy calf with covered heel and
simple leather trim, priced at $33 ... "Duca ” is an interesting
double T-strap with higher stack heel and the new semi-wedge
crepe sole ... $32 . . . Finally, "Insegna ' . . . Dark brown suede
... and brown, beige or navy leather . .. with high, stacked heel
. . . Just $30 for this one .. . Remember when navy used to be con¬
sidered strictly a spring shade? No longer true . It's now one of
the basics, and is a popular fall color!. . . Munday't, 1203 Douglas
St., 383-2211.
Smart fashions to head into fall ...
How they manage it we ll never really know hut every suc¬
cessive season in all the years we've been writing this column . .
Miss Frith s have always seemed to come up the "firstest with the
mostest!"... Like now. . . Fall fashions are arriving so thick and
fast it'U take your breath away ... and when we went browsing
around this week we saw such a variety of absplutely smashing
fashions that we really couldn t settle on any one thing to feature!
.. While dresses and skirts are strong . . . pant suits are still
very much to the fore ... We especially like those by Kendall .
a new supplier to Miss Frith's this year . . . They're pure wool
knits in three and four-piece styles . .. And what's more, the styl¬
ing is really good . . . simple a^ well-cut. but interesting in treat¬
ment . . . like the skirt-pant-jacket-vest suit. . . especially smart
in black, with black and white striped vest . Malber Inter¬
nationa! makes some smart suits too . . . One with a brown and
bone knit turtleneck pullover with a tweedy look, has a wrap
sweater . . . It's nice to see so many doubleknit suits to choose
from! ... If you're a very tailored type you may like the smart
suit in men’s suiting material . . Lots of knit dresses with ex¬
citing touches . . . A number of "fun " fur coats which really don't
try to fool you (though there's a "mink ’ which comes close to it!)
... but are fun to wear on occasion . . . and are certainly cozy to
snuggle into! . . . Mist Frith Fashions, 1619 Douglas St., 383-7181.
^ ^^FABRtCCOfTW
REGISTER NOW
For Strotch and Saw
SEWING CLASSES
Enroll Now. Clostos Start:
BASICS
Starti Mon., Aug. 30, )-3 or 7-9 p.m., Toa».. Aug. 31,1-3 or 7-
9 p.m., Wed., Sept. 1, 9-11 or 7-9 p.m. SOH
I LESSONS. AU
ADVANCED BASIC I (Bask I Graduatos Only)
Starts Mon., Sept 20, 7-9 p m. or Wed.', Sept. 22. ]-3p-m. SOC
• LESSONS. Aw
MEN^S PANTS
Starts Tum., Sept 14, 9-1' am or 7-9 pm SZ
2LE$s6ns. O
MEN'S TAILORED JACKET
Starts Tues., Sapt. 21, 1-3 p m. or 7-9 p m $10
4 LESSONS. I A
LINGERIE
Starts Thurs., Sapt. 23, 1-3 p.m. $ 1 0
5 LESSONS. I A
SPECIALTY CLASS
LONDON PANTS
Sat., Sapt. 11,9:30-11:30
1 LESSON.-. W
New Fall Fabrics Arriving Dally
COME IN AND SEE OUR TREMENDOUS SELECTION
OF FABRICS — III kilts - first ^uility
Wa sell Bernina Sewing Mechinea and our Bernina consultant is
in our store every Wed., 11 e m. to 2 p.m. or by appointment.
Stretch & Sew Leaaona are included with each Bernina
purchase. If you are in need of a Sewing Machine, see ua when
you enroll for classes Let us help you select a machine to suit
your needs. We also have a new Omega Machine Special $1M
V-/ w '^FABRIC CEN
2541 ESTEVAN AVE.
FABRIC CENTER
592-9622
j
comb Drive. Mississauga.
Ont. L4X 1M5. with Don
Thmrias as publisher, a lively
editorial content, ads from
dealers right across the
ccMintry. and a compatible
section at the end of each
issue dealing with antiques.
Single copies sell for 50 cents,
and subscription rates are SH
for one year, $11 for Iwo
years and $15 for three years.
F.vei^thing jkoints to» thi.s
tnaga/ine ha\’ing a good, long
run.
A puhli.slter’s f<x>tnote on a
press release accompanying
the 1977 layman’s Canada
British North America Post¬
age Stamp Retail Catalogue,
lust published, prepared me
for some of the eyebrow-
raisers the catalogue cort-
lains. “We feel the 1977
Ijyman retail tfyrices reflect as
accurate a barometer as hu¬
manely’ 4X)ssible to offer at
this time during ihis hectic
period in the stamp market."
he wrote.
.<ure enough. The scarce
five-cent Tarmine rose post¬
age due J32. which Scott
quoles at $1.25 used and un¬
used. has shot up from $4 to
S2(l either used or unused in
!.,> man’s. Kach of the four
stamps in last year’s coastal
ships set is up to 40 cents
unused from 14 cents. The
50-<-ent Suzor-Cnte of 1969 goes
up to $2.50 from $1.50 unused.
Lyman’s is the dealers’
hahdbook. This latest edition •
is SI .75 nr $2.20 by first-class
mad from Robert W. Lyman,
Box 23. Station V, Toronto.
M6R :iA4
Another new publication is
a Catalogue of British l^cal
Stamps issued in P^igland
and compiled and edited by
(ierald Rosen. The hooklel
also lists British • philatelic
souvenir sheets among other
sidelines. According fo the
American distributor, H. L.
Lindquist Publications Inc..
15.3 Waverly Place. New
York, the price is $4.50 post¬
paid in the U.S.: orders h'om
outside ihe U.S. must, include
$1 for postage.
New pre-stamped envelopes •
and postcards, stamp hooklris
and stamp rolls will be avail¬
able on Sept. 1. the day first-
class domestic r>ostage rales
go 1 ^ in Canada.
The new envelopes and
T)ostcai*ds in a 10-cent denomi-
Flattering iwimwear for mastectomy patients ...
Just because you may have had a mastectomy . don t think
you 11 never again be able to wear a smart, eye-catching bathing
suit ... or look as alluring as you ever did in your life! . . .
Surgical Supplies Ltd. has just received some truly exciting
swimwear Designed for mastectomy patients ... but which we
ourself would be delighted to own and wear! . . There’s a flatter¬
ing suit by Airway ... a real maillot style . . . which you can wear
several different ways . .. While it's built up in the front, and the
neckline closes with a button ... it opens up to a V-line. . Straps
are convertible in that they can be tied in a halter, criss-crossM
over the l»ck, or worn parallel ... as the spirit moves you .. .
Smart contemporary prints in blue and lime, or brown and cream
. . or in a rich plain navy . . . Other suits are from Camp. . . One
with built-up shoulders, low back, and separate panties . . in a
gay print . . Another all-in-one with little flared skirt open
Back tied with halter. . . Red with white flowers, or black with red
andfuchsia- A smart navy suit has little sleeves and a pantie at¬
tached to a long underbodice, which also holds the bra . . Another
ingenious suit has drawstrings down the front and over the
shoulders so it can be changed about or narrowed as the situation
dictates . . . Several other styles too. . subtly cut to conceal your
secret yet not look the part! . . . Just a limited number of these
swimsuits so don't delay seeing them al . . . Surgical Supplies
Ltd.. 1012 Broad St., 384-7196. AdvvrttwnnniV
(ilKAKD-PEKREIiAlX DllilTAI, ()IIAR17,
I
e
GUUr.dCC
oftme
Bold, Innovativi^ lookt ihni net new
»tandardt of »tyling excellence
This high-performance solid-state watch li designed for your
wrist by Girard-Perregaux. with its streamlined case, sloped
and recessed readout screen and matching bracelet.
The GP LKD makes an Indisputably original contribution to
the art of time. And an eminentlv practical bne too: press the
right-hand button and you read the hours and minutes, th^ ilfey.
and the date, and then the seconds—at a glance!
Alt the prestige, accuracy and dependability of today s ad¬
vanced timekeeping technology, backed by the experience
and guarantee of the pioneers of high quality quartz watches
Girard-Perregaux of Switzerland.
Rcf. mm MkriIoi 4ZS.W
R<(.M3ISIaliileiiSt«l 5$S.OO
R«(. MU Rolled Gold SIS.M
exclulively
de Goutiere
Jewellern Ltd.
25,34 ESTEVAN AVENUE
VICTORIA. B.C.
Telephone SK-3224
ommended highly l>ecause the
.selection M tiie j(X) games is
out of this world and players
of all descriptions can gain a
tremendous advantage over .
their opprments by being fa¬
miliar with this work.
A supplementary work to
this one is iOO Master Gainc^i
by Tartukuwer, which is just
as gotxl as the larger wwk
but is considerably smaller
and not nearly as expensive
I though the large work \s
quite a bargain at its $6 listed
price k.
Both books have to he high¬
ly recommended because they
take one through the spec¬
trum of early encounters
through the days of AleWiine
and Euwe and on to modem
warrioi’s of the ilk of Botvm-
nik, Smyslov and the late
Paul Keres.
Also received from the fan¬
tastic Dov'er library were
such fabulous ^vo^ks a.s Paul
Keres Beat Gainea. Znosko-
Boro^-sk.v'a End Gamea, Soviet
School of (liehA by Kotov,
Kutheriand’s Modem Knd-
Game Studies. Reflhevsk>'«
Rest Games and My Best
Games hy Sm^^iov.
I can't say enough about all
these w»Tpks. and they should
all ^ available through your
favorile Vancouver Island
bookstenos. If not. write di-
rtKtly to Dover Publications.
180 Varick Street. New York.
10014. U.S.
As for Games of the Week,
hvo excellent samples from
recent tournaments.
In the first one. David Bron-
stein polishes off Julio Kaplan
of Puerto Rico, hepling the
Soviet ace tie for first in the
last Hastings Premier event
He shared the honors with
Maslimil Hort of Czechoslova¬
kia and Wrifgang Uhlmann of
Elast Germany.
TTie other game is a big
upset from one of the Europe¬
an zonal tournaments, with
Fezir Hazai of Turkey, n real
unkTV)wn. clipping grand¬
master I./)1har of Wesi
Germany. The game got the
brilliancy prize.
Kaplm
Rronslp|ii
Black
CiRANDDAUGHTERS of Robert Service, Armelle
Davies and her ^ter Anne from Monte Carlo,
autog^raph bloMiip of new Canadian stamp honor¬
ing Bard of Yukon in Dawson City. The sisters had
never seen the Yukon made famous by their grand¬
father. Yukon Comm&sioner Art Pearson and Post¬
master-General Bryce Mackasey watched auto-
^raphinK in front of historic Dawson City post office,.
The sisters were in Victoria on Aug. 11 and visited
('anadtan Imperial Bank of Commerce branch at
(fovemment and Fort Street where Sendee worked
before going north to fame and fortune.
nation will have the same de¬
sign as that on the current
six-ceni and eight-cent pre-
stamped stationery.
Fifty-cent booklets will be
available, each containing
f<iur of the new 10-cenl defini-
ti\'e bearing the^Queen’s por¬
trait. four of the two-cent de¬
finitives with the Laurier por¬
trait, and two of the one-cent
,lohn A. Macd<jnald definitives.
Stamp rolls of 100 l(^-cent
.stamfis will also be issued.
Present suix»Hfs of -sla-
lionery in the sL\-cenf dMtomi-
nation. and booklets and rolls
conlaining eight-cent (iefini-
tives. will officially be off sale
<)n tlie new i.ssue date, but
will continue to be available
as philatelic items until Sept.
1. 1977 or until supplies run
out.
Explosion rocks
press building
RIO DE .lANEIRO (UPO
A bomb polic e said was plant¬
ed by an anti-conwnunist fac¬
tion exploded Thursday in the
offices of the Brazilian Press
.Association. Police said the
bomb injured ne rate and few
people were in the offices
when the bomb exploded in a
lavaloiy.
1 P-K4
P-K.3
2 P-Q4
P-Q4
3 N-QB.3
N-KB-l
4 B-KX5
PxP
5 NxP
B-K2
6 BxN
PxB
7 N-KB3
N-Q2
8 Q-Q2
P-QB4
9 P-Q5
P-R4
10 PxKP
• PxN
n PxNch
QxP
12 Q-B3
0-0
13 N-Q2
Q-B4
14 00-0
QxT
15 NxP
Q-asch
16 N.Q2
B-N5
17 R-KI
B-N4
18 B-Q3
QR-K1
19 RK-KBl
Q-K6
20 P-KR3
aK7
21 R-B5
B-a3
22 BxB
QxQ
23 P\Q
RxB
24 R-Q5
RxN
25 RxR
R-Ql
26 R-R-Ql
n-B5
27 resigns
Haxal
Rc-hmidt
White
Black
1 P-K4
N-KB3
2 N-QB.3
P-l^
3 P-K5
KN-Q2
4 P-Q4
P-K.1
5 P-B4
P.QB4
6 N-B3
N’-pa?
7 B.K3
PxP
8 KNxP
NxN
9 BxN
N-M
10 Q-Q2
N-R3
11 o-cw>
NxB
12 QxN
aQ2
13 P-R5
Q.N4ch
14 K-N1
QxBP
15 B-Q3
Q-N4
16 KR-Bl
aK2
17 NxP
18 QxQP
19 B-R6'
20 Q-R8ch
21 QxPeh
22 R-(J6
23 R-QN6
24 R-Ql
25 R-N8ch
26 QxBA male
PxN
0 - 0-0
PxB
K.R2
K-Bl
QxKP
R-^Kl
B-Q.l
BxR
MALVERN and WESTERHAM
SCHOOL
(Foundad 1923) (176$ Rockland)
RESIDENTIAL AND DAY SCHOOL. GRADES 9-12
BRITISH COLUMBIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
CURRICULUM IN ARTS, SCIENCES, LANGUAGES,
MUSIC AND DRAMA
LIMITED VACANCIES
APPLY MRS. SEALY 598-7631
A
4
Variety of projects midertaken
Work gets students involved in community
With financial backing from
the federal Manpo\\'er and
Immigration and National De«
fence Departments, 27 Vic¬
toria ^dents are provtag
that yoiJth can be ccmstructive
rather than destructive.
Under the supervision <jf
Major Terry McKellar of the
Canadian Forces militia
and three other adminisdrii-
turs. the youtlis are employed
under the Crjmmunity Assis-
Montague
RKIDGMAN
I td
China Crystal Otjli
tance Program, which is nrw
in its second year in the Vic¬
toria area.
McKellar explained that the
program’s purpose is to pru-
\ide meaningful employment
for youth, with emphasis on
leadership treirtng and com¬
munity involvement.
DaHp ColOnf0t Victoria, B.C., l^unday, August 22, 1976 29
Woman
mayor
rescued
SHREWSBURY, England
<CP) — Valerie Jones, this
towm's first wtmian mayor,
lost her dignity while she
yelled and hammered on a
lavatory door for lielp. She
was attending a banquet in
tlie aid of Oxfam and was
sltown to what she called a
"super-loo.”
"It was so large that when
you opened the door, tl>e room
seemed to recede inta the dis¬
tance." vShe was rescued
frt>m the locked loo after 10
minutes of shouting.
Authentic
SUZUKI VIOLIN SCHOOL
FRONACOLQUHOUN ARCT
Victoria Foundor Director sioce tttbti
1308 Dallas Rd.
383-7292
Amstlier majw* imoject is
the planting of 5.000 trees in
Saanich.
TTie students ai'e also in¬
volved in Cirst-aid training as
part of their wwk.
But it’s not all work and no
play, McKellar added.
There a.re scheduled recre-
tion periods where the stu¬
dents can relax, and some
athletic actfnties.
REGISTRATION
Miiriay—Ai|. Z3—10 i.ii.
It Fnay— Sift. lots. 3 f.M.
FIrat com* Drat MTvad baala.
FAU AND WINTER
„aa mrua- .n HECREATIOHAL PBOBRARIIRE
1744 FELTHAM RD.
Brochur* may b« plckad up at th*
Qordon Haad Racraatlonal Canira, 1744 Faltham Rd.
Call 477-1171 For Fwthar Information
LAMOtCAnm M HOM OMUNOt - ai. Til. Kn-r
SBpfmbBr IS-Octobtr 13m — WBttntMayB 7i30-0 p m.
MAUTY CAN!
TuOMlayi 7:90-0:30 pm. Stpi. t4-Oet. 12m
WBduMdayi 1:30-3:30 p.m. 8«p(. Ift-OeL 13tti 125.00
CAMS MCOSATIMa Octotwr 21tt-Nov«mbBr 28m-7 90-6 00 p.m. ThuridBy 50 90
FLOWN ANANOtMO SBpwm'bBr 1fr-OctoO«r 21M—7.30-0 00 pm TTiurBday SOM.
MINI COURttt
■NOLISM MtOCKINO:
S«pl. lO-Ocl. 21bL Ttiursday. 7.30 p.m.-D p.m. 55 50
MtlOLieOtNT
Sepl. la-Oot 15—Mon 1-2 30 pm. $590
CNOCHtT
Sopt. 16 to Ocl-21. Thur 10-11.30 am M.50
a.m. 4-5 ytara tio.oo*
•MAU ANIMAL CANt
Saptambor 13m to Novambar 22. 1975. Monday. 10 a ir
Nt-SCHOOL CNlATIVt OANCI Saptambar 13m-Oaoambar 13m, 1579, 1.00-1 45
p m. 3'4 yaan and up. Monday
2.30-3:15 p.m. Monday—3’t yaara and up
Saptambar leth-Oaoambar I5m, 1575, 9.15-10:00 a m. fhuraday
S'o yaari and up
Saptambar l7tlt-Oacambar 17m. 1575—Kaap Moving Fridays. 5.15-10 a rr
Saptambar l7m-Oaoambar 17m. 1975—Craanva Movamant fndtya
10-11.30 am.
NCOUFAOl Saptambar 16m-Oaoambar 15m. 1975. Wadnaadaya.
4 00-6:00 p.m.
CHILOMN^ PAAMA
Saptambar iSth-Dacambar ism. 1975 Wadnaadaya. 3 3l>-4:30 p.m.
UeHOLtTfAtNO
■aptambar la-Oaaambar 1««L 1579. Tuaaiajr. 7:t5-945 p.m. 526 SO
tTOmU. QAMM and ANT
8ap*.ambar 13m-0aeambar 15m, 1575. 5 30-10 30 a m. Mendaya 513 00
10 30-11:30 am. Mondaya 51300
9:30^10:30 a.m. Saptambar l4m-Oaoambar 14m. 10.30-11:30 a ffl. Tuaadaya 514.00
. 1075. Thuradaya.
BEKRSHEBA, Israel —
King David, the founder of
the Biblical kingdom of Israel
and Judah, apparently made
»»» Swiss general
admits guUt
514.00
112.00
MtN’t NIOHT
I out for Oadll Saptambar lOm-Oacambar '
5:30-0;15 p.m.
TNIM 5 tWIM
Saptambar 13m-Dacambar 13m. 1575 Mondaya V45-2 30 p.m Advancad Claaa5l6 25
Saptambar ism-Oacambar iSm. Wadnaadaya. 5 15-I0am tniarmediataa. 1000-10 45
a.m. Intarmadiataa. 10:45-11:30 a m. Bagtnnara. 517.50
■VININO OLAUC5:
Ladiaa 5 Taana 7:00-7:45 p m. 7-45-5:30 p m.
516.26
$1525
VOOA
Saptambar 13m to Oacambar I3m. Hama Yoga 5ag>nnara Mondaya.
7:00-1:15 p.m. 520 00'
Iniarmadiaia. 915-930 pm. 520.00
Saptambar 14m 10 Oaeambar t4m. 1:00-2:15 pm. Tuaadaya Bagmnara and Laval
Ona $2225
2:15-330 pm Laval Two $22.25
Saptambar lem to Oacambar lem. 5 15-10.3(1 am. Pafmnara and Laval Ona—
■ALL5T
Pra-3cboolara 4-5 yra Saptambar l4th-Oacambar 14m Tuaaday. 2.30-3.15 p m $14 00
eaglnnart 6-7 yaara—3:30-4.30 p.m. .Tuaaday $14.00
Baginnara 7-5 yaara—4 30-5 30 p.m. Tuaaday $14.00
BERN, Switzerland (UPI)
— The Swiss one-star general
arrested last week on charges
<rf giving secret military docu¬
ments to SoN’iet Etnbasiy of¬
ficials has made a inrt
confession, go\-emment
sources said. 'They said Brig.
Jean-Louis Jeanmaire, W.
commander of Switzeriand's
air defervce forces from 1969
to IS’R. gave investigators de¬
tails of contacts with various
Soviet diplomats.
the Xegev his administrative
territory, according to new
archaeolc^icai es'idence.
Prof. Eliezer Oren of Ben
Gurion University here has
cxincluded on the basis of re¬
cent discoveries in the present
day Gaza Strip area tfrat Tell
Sharuhen, an ancient settle¬
ment six miles south of Gaza,
is the site of the Biblical town
of Ziklag, to which David fled
to escape the wrath of his (la-
Oren bases his conclusions
bn the multitude of Philistine
lottery discovered during re¬
cent digs in the area, none of
which have been found fur¬
ther east than Tell Sharuhen.
The entire area of Zlklag
came under Israeli control at
the beginning of David’s
reign. On the ruins erf the Phi¬
listine town, David built an
immense e^fice in sculpted
stone! Oren says, pinnting out
In Our 72nd Year
1130 Doiipas
Phone 384-0561
$1300
$14 00
$1300
$14 00
$14.00
$1400
NOTICI TO AU DANCINi 5 FtOUM tRATINS
Saptambar 13-15-16 to Oacambar t3-15-16m. Ballat Monday 13 Saaaiont
Wadnaaday 14 Saaaiona
Thuraday 13 Saiiiona
Ragiatar at Gordon Haad Raeraalion Cantra.
NUFF5TNT
Ara-Scbool 4-5 yra. Saptambar 15m-Oacambar itm. 1575—Saturdaya.
5 a.m.-10 p m.
UU5IC Pra-School 4-5 yarara. Pra-fnatrumantal. Saturdaya 10 a-m.-ll a n
ONAMA
Pra-SctK>ol 5-5 yra Saturday# 11 a m.-l2 p.m.
ANTS and CNAFTS
Saptambar 14th lo Novambar 90m, 1975. Ana and Cratia—Aga 5-12 yra. Tuaadaya.
3:45-5 p.m. 512.00
ANTS and CNAFTS
Saptambar lOth-Oacambar 5m, 1975. Thuradaya. 3:00‘4;00 pm. Aga 5-5 yra. 112.00
FALtTTI KNIFS PAINTIMS —
Ociobar 7th-Oacambar lem. 1575 1 p m.>3 p.m. 5nd 3 p m -$ p m. 525 00
Ootobar 5lh-Daoambar 17th. 9:30-11:30 a m. $25 00
TAP DANCtNQ
Saptambar 13m to Oacambar 13m, 1976. 3 30-4 30 p m —Saginnara 6 yra. and ovar.
4.30-5:30 p.m.—6 yr*. ar>d ovar
6:30-5 30 p.m —5 yra. and ovar
6 90-7:30 p.m —5 yra. and ovar $13 00
Saptambar I4th to Oacambar t4ih, 1975. Tuaaday. 10:30-tV30 a m —4-5 yra.$t4.00
tALLNOOM DANCtNQ
Saptambar I4m to Oacambar t4m. 1976. Tuaaday. 500-9 30 p.m.-lmprovara$26.29
Wadnaaday 7:30-9 p.m.—Baginnara Wadnaaday ^10:30 p.m.—imarmadtataa
BATON TWINUNO
Saptambar l5m-Oaoambar I9m. 1975 Thuradaya 4:00-5:00 p m.-Baginnara $13 00
•-20
Fall
Starts
Thursday
August 26tb
Pre-selling
Tuesday and
Wednesday
on most items.
Charge It!
New Accounts
Opened in Minutes ^
Time to start your mix and match game ... with
colors and textures that will help you come up with a
wealth of winning combinations ...
SlURTS^in a wide range of styles with the flattering new
lines of fail 1976. Choose from fine wool ^eeds such as the
one pictured above.
SWEATERS^classic pullover and cardigan styles in
cashmere, lambswool or camel hair, including colors to
match skirts for the "dyed-in-the-wool" coordinator!
BLOUSES—the final touch that expresses the real YOU ...
a long-sleeve shirtwaist or tie front style in your own special
shade. Luxurious polyester.
Come in soon, and see the full array of fall fashions we have
assembled for you in our ladies' dept.
UJ&J LUILSOn
I. I m I T a o
Open Daily 9 a.m. lo 5:30 p.m.
1221 Covnnmcnt Street (Opp. the Fort OKke) 3W-7177
12W Newport A»e. (Oeli ley) SS2-2821
Emprew Hotd (721 Covertiment St) 3a3>1S19
Oty Parking FacHMet Tkketa VaMaled Here
1
30 Colontfit Victoria, ^.C , Sunday, Auguat 22. 1976
THE
GOURMET
CALORIC CONSCIOUS COOKING
By Barbara Gibbons
One. plus t>^’o and ttiree
equals four. That's our easy-
lo-remember recipe for pro¬
tein-rich, low-calorie crepe!
One egg plus two tablespoon.-^
flour and three tablespoons
milk equals four crepes. Need
more? Simply multiply.
For a diazcn crepes triple
the recipe; Use thnw eggs,
she taA)lespo(Ws flour and nine
tablesiMxim’ skim milk (a lit¬
tle more than half a cup>.
What mokes our crepe for-
. .._ A. . .
A college preparatory Cnnsiian ecnooi tor girls K-12
day and boarding — coeducational day school K-6 *
Admission based on morit ngardfsss of race or creed
027 North Tacoma Ave^ Teooma. WA 00403
300 272-2210
mula different from most rec-
i()es is the higher proportlrm
of protein-rich ingr^ents.
milk and ej^. and the lesser
aiTWunt of flour. Our egg-rich
mixture is really a cross be¬
tween an omelet and a
"skinny pancake." It makes
delicious crepes in a nonstick
omelet pan ... or in new*
crepe gac^ets now nishing to
the TTiarket. ,
Here's hou’ to make eight
delicious strawberry dessert
The British Columbia
Chiropractic Assoc,
announces the opening of an
office for the practice of
CHIROPRACTIC
by
JAMES ALLEN, D.C.
at
2602 Quadra Street
(One block South of Hilkicle)
By Appointment
386-8887
ONE WEEK ONLY
LADIES’S MEN’S Q30
2-PCE. SUITS O
lOiaVATIS
3Sa-SBSS
384-4641
_ We plok up and deliver
e 2 i et no eirtre oherge-y
NORTH DOUGLAS
... WHIM IT LAtTtlll
f^^^^PURE CANe"^” ” ^
ROQERS
B.C. SUGAR
FINE GRANULATED
40 kg
19.95
10 kg
5.25
1 2 kg
1.15 1
f 10 lbs.
2.43 )
C 2 lbs.
.53 I
) ICING SUGAR (
I 1 kg
.63 (
1 PURE CANE
1 GOLDEN YELLOW
i 1.33
} PURE CANE
1 BEST BROWN
i .55 j
2 ...89
ROGERS
GOLDEN SYRUP
NODELIVERiet
NORTH DOUGLAS
DELICATESSEN
3891 DOUGLAS (Iwi Mckt nilt if HtKiuKI
SAT.-SUN. 10-6 WEEKDAYS 10-9
Cloaod Mondaye
How to thwart salmonella
crepes in a nonstock sklUet or
omelet pan, using no added
fat or oil:
STRAWBERRY CREPES
2 large eggs
pinch of salt
4 tablesppons all-purpose
fiour
6 tablespoons skim milk
1 pfbit of fresh straw'berries
3 tablespoons free-pouring
brown sugar or granulat¬
ed brown-sugar substitute
' one-l)alf cig> sour cream
or low-fat sour dressing
one-half ciq> low-fait vanU-
la yogurt
I Beat eggs, salt, flour and
I miUv tc^ther and let test. To
I make crepes wttA no fat
I * added, spray a six-inch non¬
stick omelet pan with cooking
spray fcM* no-fat fiylng, then
heat o\*er moderate flame,
until a drop of water will
bounce.
Pour in a little of the batter,
about twt> or three table¬
spoons. just enough to thin^
cover the bottom of the pan
when rotated. (Don't add too
much batter or you'll have a
pancake instead of a crepe.)
Cook about 30 seconds, then
turn and brotvn the other side.
Flip crepe out of the pan onto
a plate. Continue making
cr^ies, one at a time, until all
the batter is used.
To make filling: Wash, hull
and slice the berries and
sweeten to taste. In another
bowl stir sour dressing and
vanilla }t3gurt together until
well-blended. Spoon three or
four tablespoons af sliced ber¬
ries in the centre of each
crepe and add some yogurt
mixture. Fold up and arrange
on plates. Top with additional
yogurt cream. Makes efght
crepes, 106 calories each with
sugar 9S each with sugar sub¬
stitute
Any combination ot fresh
fruit can be made into low-
calorie dessert crepes.
For main-course crepes, fill
your protein-rich "skij^ pan¬
cakes" wdth hot white meat,
chicken, crabmeat or tuna
and top with a well seasoned
"cream sauce" made with-
lowfat milk and flour ... no
fat added. Use a little dry
white wine or fat-skimmed
iHoth to season the sauce:
add a dash of nutmeg and
some finely noinced parsley.
It’s Tiger
or Karen!
TORQUAY, England (CP)
—• Tiger the mighty mouser
{ has disrupted Paddy Poland’s
I romance with Karen Klinken-
J berg, a 21-year-old secretary.
T^er, a ginger tomcat,
liked displaying his htmting
trophies such as a tiny mou.se,
bir^ and rats on Karen's pil¬
low*.
The breaking point came
when Karen found a dead
mouse on her jeans. Her ul-
timaUim now is: "Either the
cat goes or I go."
French paper
strike lingers
PARIS (UPIV — Journalists
at the newspaper France-Soir,
of! since Mon^y over a con-
t3X>versial attempt to take
over the puUication, voted
last week to continue their
strike. The newsmen were an¬
gered \yy an attempt to gain
50 per cent control of the
paper by national assembfy
member Robert Hersant, who
already ocmtToIs France's
biggest national paper, Le Fi¬
garo. as well as some 40 pro-
\incial newspapers.
What my column is about
is, as you know, meat in all
its glories. But today, please
excuse me if I touch on an
aspect dial is et least as im¬
portant as the others we have
shared —- but has no glory
quotient at all. It's how to
thwart salmonella, the pes¬
tiferous bacteria that can turn
good meat into a severe pain
in the stomach.
At dean-^ tlThe in the good
old days, we used to throw a
handful of sawdust on the
block, scrape U otf with a stiff
wire brush, wipe it with a
damp cloth and oali it clean.
That may weii be the reason
why oid-fashioned woiiden but¬
cher blocks liave been banned
in many areas and recced
by new-fangled ptestic. You
simpll^ can't clean as well
with sawdust as you can with
steam, and when It comes to
handling food nothing is quite
as cnidal as clean.
Strict sanitary pnotices in
handling meat and poultry
are becoming even more ri¬
gidly enforced by those sen¬
dee of the goA-emment
charged with such things. In
meat-packing plants and sau¬
sage Mtcbene under their ju¬
risdiction, these agencies re¬
quire steanKleaning of tools,
The Butcher
by Merle Ellis
same utensils to handle meat
bodi before artd after oooking.
If. for exan^ile, you use a
knife to trim a piece of meat
befcoe codcing, and the same
knife to carv*e it when it is
done, you run the risk of re-
contamination. Always
w’ater after they have come
in contact with any raw meat
or poultry.
Most important! detui your
. cuttingbbo^ after each use
and NEVER use the some
board for any food that will
not be coerced until and unles.*!
equipment, counter tops and
work areas almost continu¬
ously in an attempt to control
sahnonella contamination.
3afana — what, contami —
which? You say! Salmonella
is pmbaUy the cause ot more
up^ stomachs and head¬
aches than anything else in
the worid. Remember the last
time you thought you had the
flu? Well, you may have been
suffering from salmonellosis,
one of the more common
types of food poieonlng; to
common that it is estimated
there may be as many as two
million cases per year. That's
ccmunonl
Meat and poultry are
among the foods most likely
to carry Salmonella because
animals are frequently infect¬
ed with the bacteria, which
accounts for why regulations
in toe meat industry have be¬
come more and more restric¬
tive.
Collectibles
By JOHN HP]ARN
Mrs. J. Reid of Burnaby
would like to know the value
of a oast iron schocri bell, roof
type with rope pull, 24 inches
in circumference.
It depends on condition and
markings. You might be able
to buy one few $150 If you
were hicky: more likely it
wxnild run to $250.
Mrs. G. B. Williams of
Courtenay owns a Steinway
Square grand piano bearing
an 1856 patent and asks for in¬
formatics, value, etc.
This is much too tricky a
quAtion for me and calls for
special expertise. Steinway is
the Roils Royce of pianoa and
there is no such ihing as a
cheap one. Unless it has been
stored in unfavoraWe condi¬
tions. age will not have deteri¬
orated it. If it is a rare model
the price could soar into the
tens of thousands of dollars.
In other w'ords, this is not
something to guess at.
\Vhy not ask Steinway?
They are not hustlers and will
give you a straight answer. It
is not like going to some dubi¬
ous dealer who is figuring out
how little he can offer you for
It. Furthermore, since the
way you are treating It may
be adding or subtracting thou-
."sands of dollars from the
price, you owe it to yourself
to get the best opinion possi-
We — and tliat is from St«n-
way. If you cannot locate
your local representative, call
the nearest symphony orches¬
tra and ask for his name.
E. Cfolley of South Burnaby
has a Royal Doulton humidor
reputed to be 150 years old.
Tiis is not likely. The very
oldest of Doulton marks «ily
dates back 120 years and the
word *Royar was not added
until 1902. It should still be a
good buy at $75.
A. E. York of Revelstoke
has a one penny bank t:4cen in
excellent condition which was
issued by the Bank of Upper
Canada in 1857.
This sounds as though .It
might be interesting but the
(Tharlton Catalogue of Canadi¬
an Coins (which no collector
should be without) says that
after the bank failed in 1867,
eleven tone of these tokens
w*ere found in the vaults.
They were sold as scnu>
metal to be mrited down but
there are so many mint speci¬
mens around that it seems
certain that many of them
survived. Even so, it should
still be worth about $3.50.
Mrs. Inez Fowler of Coombs
has a French fashion boWc
Journal dee Demoiselles, date
185^1^, with beautiful hand
colored fashiem prints and
many articles — perfect con¬
dition.
1 w-ould hate to guess at the
v'olue of such a book. Fashion
collectors wlh drool over it 1
cannot believ'e it should sell
for less than $100 but maybe a
whole lot more. I will be glad
to pass on enquiries to Mrs.
Fowler.
Fly^WEAR
EyEWEAR
.. Remember the braced aviator goggle of WWII?
Well, we’ve reached Into the past, adapted the
style to moderns, everyday wear and have
come up with this smart number. Try one on
for size. In either plastic or all metal, when
you visit . . .
po
I PRESCRIPnOM OPTICAL
^ 7 Conveoient Locations
CLEARANCE
Continuee
ThouMnds
of Shoes
Mm’b
B lack Oxford
with triple leather sole,
goodyear welt, sizes 6-12
widths D-E-EEE. * _ ^
Regular $45. *28
Kaufman Work
and Hiking Boot
waterproof — Syltlex,
260-0550 Tan Insulated K-
Kleat sola, guaranteed
waterproof, size 6 to 13 full
and hall, no size 12Vt,
regular value to $4r
sizes 5-13
NOW
BALLY
Man's Loafar
with crape soles, and
leather uppers. In blue and
tan. sizes 7'/i-11V^
ss;”’;.
2238
OAK BAY
AVENUE
JnTh 0 W//aaa"
thoreughly wash your hands, ^ you havo tooroughly cleaned
counter tops, utensils, dishes, it with hot soapy water — not
etc., with soap and good hot aawxiust.
It's why wtxxien meat
blocks are being replaced by
plastic; why it’s becoming in¬
creasingly difficult to find a
good knife in a modern meat
market with anything but a
BFterihzable plastic handle;
and why in many markets
toey don’t even use sawdust
on the floor.
Id spite of all of toe existing
regulations and those that are
on the way, it is very unlScely
that salmonella will be done
in until eitoer a qualified in¬
spector Is stationed in every
h^e kitchen in the country
or consumeiv and cooks and
kitchen cleener-uppers be¬
come aware of the problem
and foUow faithfully the few
simple precautions necessary
to control it.
^ce house to house inspec¬
tion is very unliltoly and, erv*en
more, very imwmted, here
are a few simple but impor¬
tant steps to help protect
ycKfffelf and >'our family from
Salmonellosis:
• When >'ou defrost meat
in the r efrigerator, keep it
wrapped tn its freeeer paper
and make sure that it doem't
come in contact with any
otoer food.
• Don’t allow meet,
poultiy and other foods to
stand at r oom temperature
for more than two hours. Sal¬
monella and such thrive at
room temperature. As a rule
of thumb, keep foods either
under 40 degrees or ov’er 140
d egr e e s F.
• Cooking kills toe germs,
but be careful of "cross-om-
lamination." Do not use the
Bruthed Amet
Pyjamas and Nightgowns
Full length etylet lor thoea chHIy nights, choose
from long-sleeve deeigns In pink, green or yel¬
low.
Pyjamas, from $24
Gowns, from $22
Also
A Lovely Selection
of Nightgowns
Cotton or nylon tricot gowns beautitully trim¬
med with lace or embroidery—so flatteringly
remlninel
tier* Heurei
Sat
10 ajn. to
0 p^n.
NEW PUPIL REGISTRATION
In
GREATER VICTORIA SCHOOLS
(Dislrlctei)
If your child
is new to the School District this summer, or
has changed neighborhood since June 30,
enroll at the nearest appropriate school at
these times:
Elementary Schools
(Kindergarten through Grade 7)
September 1 end 2 between y:00 e.m. and 12:00 noon
Junior and Senior Secondary Schodl^ n
Arbutus (Gr. 8 - 10 ) 2306 Edgelow St. 477-1878
Aug. 30.31, Sept. 1:10:00 am. tc 12:00:1:00 p.m. tc 3:00
Cedar Hill (Gr. 8-10) 3910 Cedar Hill Rd. 477-6945
Aug. 30:5:30 a.m. tc 5:30 p.m.
Central (Gr. s-io) 1200 foh st. 386-3591
Aug. 30,31. Sept. 1:9:00 a.m. to 12:00; 1:00 p.m. to 3:00
Colquitz (Gr. 8-10) 320 Brunswick PI. 479-1678
Aug. 30: 8:30 s.m. to 12:00:1:00 p.m. to 5:30
Dean Heights (Gr. S-IO) 3020 Richmond Rd. 592-0712
Aug. 26,27, Sept. 1.2.3:9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Esquimau (Gr. 10 - 12 ) 847 Colvllle Rd. 382-9226
Aug. 30. 31 Sept. 1:9:00 s.m. to 12:00; 1:00 p.m. to 3:00
Harbour View (Gr. 6-9) 637 Head St. 385-9735
Aug. 30,31. Sept. 1,2:10:00 a.m. to 12:00
Lambrick Park (Gr. 8 - 11)4139 Torquay or. 477 -OI 8 I
Aug. 23, 24. 25: 6:30 a.m. to 12:00
Lansdowne (Gr.8-10)1765LansdowneRd. 598-3336
Aug. 30:8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Mt. Douglas (Gr. 11 - 12 ) 3970 Gordon Head Rd. 477-6978
Aug. 30.31:10:00 a.m. to 12:00:1:00 p.m. to 3:00
Oak Bay (Sr.) (Gr. 10 - 12 ) 2151 Cranmore Rd. 598-3361
Aug. 30. 31, Sspt. 1: 9:00 a m. to 12:00; 1:00 p.m. to 3:00
Oak Bay (Jr.) (Gr. S-IO) 2101 Cadboro Bay Rd. 592-1205
Aug. 30: 6:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Reynolds (Gr. 8 - 12 ) 3963 Borden St. 479-1696
Sept. 3: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Shoreline (Gr. S-lO) 2750 shoreline Dr. 386-8367
Aug. 30.31. Sept. 1,2,3:9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
S. J. Willis (Gr. 8-10) 923 Topaz Ave. 382-2171
(Same registration times loc^New Canadians)
Sspl.J, 2: 9:00 s.m. to 11:30; 1:00 p.m.nto 3:00
Spectrum (Gr. 10 - 12 ) 957 W. Burnside Rd. 479-8271
Aug. 30.31. Sopt. 1; 10:00 a m. to 2:00 p.m.
Victoria (Gr. 10 - 12 ) I 26 O Grant St. 388-5456
Aug. 30,31, Sept. 1:10:00 a.m. to 12:00; 1:00 p.m. to 3:00
If In doubt which school to attend, contact the Greater
Victoria School Board offices at 592-1211.
Classes begin Tuesday, Sept. 7. Watch for details in
this newspaper on the Labor Day weekend
Datl^ Colontot Vlctona, B.C. Sunday. Au 2 ust 22, 1976
They’d rather
duck
than fight
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)
— A United States Air Force
surv'ey of new recruits shows
many would rather duck into
the clouds than face an
enemy.'
Asked whether, given a
choice, they would evacuate a
base under attack or stay to
fight, 49 per cent said they
wwild battle it out. But 23 per
cent said flatly they wtwld not
and 28 per cent were not sure.
Of the recruits sun’eyed at
Lakeland air force base 37
per cent said tl^ey ^\T)uld not
have enlisted if the U.S. was
at war. Lackland Is the air
force’s depot tor all recruits
from across tlie country.
The bulk of the survey, con¬
ducted earlier this year tor
the Air Force Military Train¬
ing Centre 'at Lackland, sup-
ix>rts the air torce contention
that today’s recruits are the
best e\‘er.
Seven Chapele
Dedicated to Service
SAND MORTUARY LTD.
• MEMORIAL CHAPEL
OF CHIMES • and
• THE FAMILY CHAPEL
OK MEMORIES ’
1803 Quadra, Victoria, B.C.
388-5155 383-71
KLEENEX 100’S
FACIAL TISSUES
SANDS FUNERAL
CHAPEL OF ROSES
9838 Fourth St.
Sidney, B.C.
856-2932;
Soft yet strong Kleenex facial tissues in
White and pastel shades.
Regutarty 1.14 each
K mart
Special
K mart Special
BOXES OF
100
SANDS FUNERAL
CHAPEL OF HEATHER
317 Goldstreara Av«
Colwood, B.C.
478-3821
LIMIT 4 BOXES
PER CUSTOMER
UMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER
UMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER
SANDS HIRST
FUNERAL CHAPEL
187 Trunk Road.
Duncan. B.C.
746-5212
Take a break, treat yourself to
this delicious K mart special!
Includes a hot hamburger
sandwich smothered with rich
brown gravy, creamy whipped
potatoes and a hot vegetable.
SANDS LADYSMITH
FUNERAL CHAPEL
91U 1st Ave.
LadysmiUi, B.C.
SANDS WESTWOOD
• CHAPEL OF FLOWERS
No. 1 Newcastle Ave.,
.Nanaimo. B.C.
Your Community
Funeral Chapels
Dedicated to Service
MEN’S ASSORTED
DRESS HOSE
SAVM6S
Roeidorly 2.25
K meft S^lel
Regularly 1.33
K mert S^lel
Members of
NATIONAL SELECTED
MORTICIANS
Since 1953 (by Invilalion)
17-FT.
RE-WEB KITS
Assorted colours
6 per customer
GHIETTETBACII
RAZOR
Adjustable^TwIn Blade
2 per cuetomer
INTERNATIONAL
FLIGHT
CARE
Here, at home...
Sands removal service
covers Vancouver island
and all othar points.
STRETCH NYLON
PANTYHOSE
-AU SHEER
Regularly .56 e pr.
K mart Speda!!
32-FT.
RE-WEB KITS
Assorted colours
2 per cuetomer
Specializing in
forwarding to or from
anywhere
WORLD-WIDE FUNERAL
INFORMATION SERVICE
Cali collect
or cable
"Mortuary Victoria"
A Division of Sands
ON SALE AUGUST 23rd ONLY, While Quantities Last
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
^fQiiiq
^ OUR MANAGER’S
PICK 0’ THE WEEK!
HOMESPUN NAPKINS
160 per pkg.
4 per ciwtonier.
Zi\
00
lUnAN PAPER PLATE HOIOERS 1
4 per pkg. 1
3 per cuetomer. 1
100
1 PiM-
PHOTO ALBUMS
assorted colours
2 per cuetomer.
2i2
|00
DECORATIVE HANGING POTS
2 per cuetomer.
2
fOO
■ Met
FIRE KINS
STACKING MUGS
4 per cuetomer.
2i1
00
JshnsM a Jshstsa BABY SHAMPOO 11
15.8 ozs. 450 ml. M
2 per customer. ' . Bi
too
s Met
LOWNEY’SBHIDOE MIXTURE 1
16-oz. bag I
2 per cuetomer. 1
00
NCt
ALL SHEER PANTY HOSE 4
6 pair pe. pkg., one sire — Beige or spice 1
3 pkge. per cuetomer. |
00
ttl.
DESIGNER TABLES C
Assorted colours ^
2 per ouetomer. %
;oo
P Met
MR. CHAIN FENCE KIT
, 2 per cuetomer.
112
L. - m
antis
h
Indtptndtnlly
FtmHy Owntd ind
Conirolltd
Sine* 1912
UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS SHOPPING CENTRE,
3986 SHELBOURNE. VICTORIA, B.C.
V
32 Colonist Victoria, B.C., Sunday, August 22, 1976
n
-.OT
•-
A sentimental journey
By ROBl!jftT Ml'SEI,.
LONDON (UP1» - "The
last time I stood here/' said
Louis Alter, "was 50 years
ago.”
He was in the courtyard of
St. James Palace looking up
at the window's of what <xice
was the apartment of the
Prince of Wales, long belore
Crown Prince Edward met his
American divorcee and died
in fielf*e.xile in France as the
Duke of Windsor.
"The prince liked to play
the drums, you know." said
Alter. "He used to ask me to
come along and play the
piano to his beat. The win>
dows look empty now but they
were alwrays’ blazing with
lights in those days. Tltey are
all gone, aren't they? The
prince and all his beautiful
people.”
This is a sentimental jour¬
ney for Alter, 74, who toured
Britain in 1923, 1924 and 1936
as accompanist to fhe
greatest singer her time,
Nora Bayes, before he went
on to fame himself as a song¬
writer.
He composed the enduring
symphonic jazz classh^ Man¬
hattan Serenade at the ]'e-
quest of Paul Whiteman and a
string of hits for Frank Sina¬
tra. Louie Armstrong, Bing
Crosby. Bea Lillie, Joan
Qnw’ford, Fannie Brice.
Somehow, although his ca¬
reer really started here and
he always planned to come
back, the decades slipped by.
•'Is Kim Manchester
around?” he asked. "He was
a great friend mine.”
The Duke of Manchester, he
was told, now lives in Ken>’a.
"1 would have liked to have
seen Noel Coward. He used to
beg me to get him an a{^inl-
ment with Nora so he could
})Iay her his songs. I liked him
and especially the way he
wrote so I arranged the mee¬
ting and that was his start as
a songwriter.”
"I've always been worl<-
ing." he said. "I’ve just
finished the music for Budd
Schuiberg's dramatization of
The Disenchanted by F. Scott
Fitzgerald.” a
In May. Alter w'as elected
to the ^gwriters Hall of
Fame, and recalling this
brought forth a flood of mem¬
ories; Playing jazz with violin
virtuoso Jascha Heifetz, writ¬
ing My Kind of Love for the
audition that won Bing Crosby
his first film ccmtract. Pres¬
ident Franklin D. Roosevelt
confiding that Home on the
.Range wan't his favorite song
— It was Aiter's Twilight on
the Trail. .
— Colontst photo by Alox Sorts
At 91, he’s still playing chess
Dan MacAdam, 91, of Victoria, stlU. finds time for
occasional game of chess and this time his opponent
is Victoria organizer and leading woman chess star
Lynn Stringer. At MacAdam’s elbow is special
plaque presented by C3iarles Birch of Victoria, treas¬
urer of the Oiess Foundation of Canada, for Mac¬
Adam’s 40 years of work in national che» He was
chairman of foundation, publisher of first yearbook
and organizer of many other activities.
Dr. Hugh W. Lament
Announces the opening of his practice of
ORTHODONTICS
at
No. 302-1640 Oak Bay Avenue, Vioorla
Telephone 595-4341
CLIFFSIDE SCHOOL
Shawnigan Laka,
Vancouvar laland, B.C.
An Independent boarding
school for boys Grades III to IX
offering a complete education
Including a special class for
boys whn specific learning dis¬
abilities.
For turlher Informallon and
profocctu. picaw write to the
headmaiter or phone (604) 743-
9424 or 743-5174.
Herbs magicians
of culinary world
By MINNIE BERNARDINO
LOS ANGELES — Herbs
are fascinating magicians of
the culinary world. Can one
find any better flavor en¬
hancer than a touch of thyme
in clam chowder or gumbo?
And whet flavor can match a
pinch of tarragon with fish?
Sage. dlU. chervil or mar¬
joram? All other herbs, of
course.
In his eternal search for ad¬
ventures in food, it did not
take man long Id discov-er fo¬
liage with fragrant and sa¬
vory attributes that tickled
his palate. In both ancient
and modem literature, the
names and lore of herbs are
recorded. Fragrant plants like
mint, rue and cumin are men¬
tioned in the Bible. Sweet
hert)s were che>ved by Casan¬
ova to perfume Ms breath. Di
the Middle Ages, monks cul¬
tivated lovely gardens of culi¬
nary herbs, and today one
reads at beautiful ideas for
herbal landscaping and the
growing of beibs indoors and
out
What gives herbs this virtue
of in 4 >arting flavor and
aroma to dishes? The magical
properties lie in the essential
oils found in the seeds or fo¬
liage. These aromatic oUs are
soluble and volatilized by heat
so they permeate foods.
So vast is the world of herbs
and spices that many plants
and their uses still remain a
mystery. Beginning herbal
cooks will find it is wise to
equip themselves initially
with just a handful of the
more popular herbs.
"The fresh-herb enthusiast
should engage in using a few
herbs at the start. Some of
the simile basic herbs like
chives, dili, basil, sage, tar¬
ragon and parsley will grow
fairly easily in the garden or
patio as well as on a kitchen
^ window sill,” says Qara Ry-
glo), herb garden chairman at
the Los Angeles County Ar¬
boretum. She grew up in Po¬
land with fresh herbs avail¬
able in the family garden and
likes to use frMh herbs in
cooking. Tmly, anyc»>e who
has tasted the difference in
dishes seasoned with fresh
lierbs compared to those sea¬
soned with dried herbs will
agree that fresh seasonings
offer a finer and more delica¬
te flavca*. I
Once you begin growing
herbs in your garden <»* In
containers indoors, it is most
rewarding to be able to use
the seeds or leaves in west
and casserole dishes, soups,
salads or flavorful teas.
Although fresh-herb
harvests for instant use ore
always desirable. drying
herbs at home for winter use
and for making fragrant pot¬
pourris and sachets also is
beneficial. To substitute dried
herbs for fresh, use cme-half
teaspoon crushed dried heibs
for every tablespoon of fresh.
This prcqjortion depends on
the age of the dried herbs, as
the flavor and aroma quickly
deteriorate during storage.
Dried heibs have a one-year
shelf life for maximum quali¬
ty. When using them, rub the
leaves to a dust to release
flavor.
Discovering the best use of
herbs and spices in cooking
can be achieved by testing
and tasting. "As a member of
the Herb Society of America,
1 share new rc?cipes' 'Aith
other members who do like¬
wise,” says Mrs. R>'gtol. "My
l>e8t tossed green sala^ mixes
flavorful fresh herbal foliage
and flowers Ilka lovage, dill,
basil, chives, borage and sage
flowers and nasturtium flow¬
ers if in season.”
Alma PonteUo, another ac¬
tive member of the Herb Soci¬
ety of America who also tends
the one<4cre herb garden at
the Arboretum, finds herbal
cooking a pleasant challenge.
She is an expert on herM
drinks like aromatic teas r^nd
mixed beverages. One of her
latest CMicoctions is an hors
d'oeuvre maxle with bimiet, a
femlike herb that has a deli¬
cate odoir and flavor resem¬
bling that of the cucumber.
The herb makes a good fla¬
vored butter and is excellent
in soupa, salads and tea. Bur^
net may be an herb to keep in
mind if one is allergic to cu¬
cumbers.
WTien cooking with herbs, it
is w'ell to remember that too
strong a spicing can ruin a
dish. Learn to harmonize the
aromatic flavors of one or two
herbs in the course of a meal
and avoid using too much of
any herb or you’ll lose the
true flavor of the meat or
vegetable.
SALE ENDS
SATURDAY
AUG. 28
Our 29th Birthday Celebration Continues...
The Season’s Greatest
Fabric Sale
More fabulous fabric
specials from Gold’s ...
you'll find incredible values
on thousands of yards of
exciting new fabrics for fall.
Wb’ve got everything you
need to sew up a bright new
season for your entire family
... at sale prices that
won’t break your budget!
Diamond anniversary
Long-time residents of Banff who retired to Victoria
in 1953, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Oxboixxigh, of 217-3220
t^adra, celebrated diamond wedding anniversai-y
earlier this month. Eighty friends and relatives con¬
gratulated them at garden party at the home of
their son-in-law and daughter in Ontrai Saanich.
Rev. John Travis propo^ toast to couple, who
were married in Manchester, Eingland.
DO YOU KNOW
THAT YOU CAN PURCHASE A
SOLID ROCK MAPLE BEDROOM |
SUITE MADE BY ...
^ilas
Woolens A Blends
Suiting*, Coatings
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Come see the Incredible
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of manufacturer's sample
pieces!
Designer _
Sample Fabrics
Values msmem
to 10.00 Yard
Fall Colours
Plush Velour
ValuMtoS.OO
5
88
Yard
You'll love the touchable tex¬
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lor fall fashions that make It
happen! Full bolt. 60" wide.
Sweatshirt
Acrylic
Value* to 5.00
2
88
Yard
The cozy choice for “warm¬
ups” and all your comfor¬
table sportive wear needs.
Easy-care. tool Full bolt, 56-
60“ wide.
Poly-VIscose
GABARDINE
Valuaa ^^44
to S.OO mm Yard
We special purchased this
favorite back-to-school
fashion fabric especially for
our celebration! Machine
washable, full bolt, 60" wide.
Wool and
Nylon Blends
ValuM to 6.00
444
Yard
Wonderful wool .. . the
fashionable classic to take
you everywhere In style this
fall. Solids and fancies in full
bolt. 54-60“ widths.
Plnwale
Corduroy
ValuM to 4.00
1
97
Yard
Terrific colour selection in
this easy-care cotton and
poly/cotton blend. Great (or
back-to-school wardroblngl
Full bolt. 45" wide.
Back-to-School
NOTIONS
Fiberglass Tape Measure
Bead Headpins
Hand Sewlno Needles
Wristband Pincushion
Sewing Gauge
GET ALL
WITH IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
FOR AS LITTLE AS
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97
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• DELIVERY INCLUDED ANYWHERE IN R.C.
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716 JOHNSON ST. PHONE 388-Z45S |
BRITISH COLUMBIA’S LAROBST VILAS DBALSR
• A DIVISION OF MONARCH STORES
CUTTING BOARD
Valuo*
to 5.99
This handy table-top protector opens to
40"x72" and Is lined for easy pattern
layout. Folds to 12"x40'’.
Each
Brushed
Cotton Denim
Value to 4.00
97
Yard
Brushed denim Is dynamite
on the back-to-school scene!
Solt. easy-care and comlor
table, too! Full bolt. 45" wide.
Man-Made
Fun Furs
Valuaa to 12.00
788
Yard
Fakery la fun and
fashionable, tool Come see
our terrific selection In this
acryllc/poly blendl Full bolt.
60" wide.
Contemporary
Dress Prints
Value* to 3.00
1
78
Yard
This season, appear In print!
Exciting cotton and blend
prints to co-ordinate with
solids for a total fashion look.
Full bolt, 45" wide.
LOADS OF FREE
PARKING
VANCOUVER
• 2e90OranvllleA11thAva.
• 11th A Arbutus
• 341 Lonsdale, North Vancouver (at 3rd 8t.)
Mon-tWad, Sat 5:30-*; Thurs, Fd 9:30-1
• 435 North Rd. (Cariboo Central
Mon, Tuea, Sat 9:30-*: Wad, Fd »:30-t
SURREY
• 10653 King George Hwy.
VICTORIA
• 1585 Hlllalds Ave.
Mon-Fd *:30-fc Sal a-JO-a
PRINCE OEOROE »
• Pine Centre Shopping Mall
A
f
CoiOniOl Viutuna, B.C. Supday, Au^Odl 21, iJ(u
Priiice Crest winners announced
Great fishing again enjoyed during July
King P'isherman Contest wi*
ti-ies for July just past were
within one entry of the second
highest number of July en¬
tries in the 22 years of Colo-
nist contests.
There were 6,143 entries in
• July, 1976. and 6,144 In July,
1974.
in July 1963. sporis fisher¬
men had a real lx>nanza when
commercial fishermen were
out on .strike, and Xn all-tim^
high July entry of 14,998 en¬
tries was recorded.
Hot coho and chincxik fish¬
ing in lower Island waters
and fairly good chinook fish¬
ing with spells of fair coho
fishing in mid-island watei**
accounted foi* the good fishing
this past July and it is con¬
tinuing into August, witli bel¬
ter up-lsland fishing.
•luly Chinook entries lolalled
3,460 and coho 2,418.
Fresh water fishing has
been rather dismal this year,
with only 25 river trout en¬
tered during July. 73 lake
trout and 109 small-mouth
bass.
__ To win a Prince O'est in
July It took a 32-6-pound tyec;
a 38-pound chinook: a
9.12-pound coho: any river
trout, a 3.3-p(gind lake trout
and a three-pound small-
mouth bass.
Nine women won Princesa
Ciesls In July.
Don Erickson. Box 555.
.Sfoke; is trying for the honor
of becoming a complete an¬
gler by winning Prince Crests
in all categories of the King
Fisherman Contest.
in .May 1976 he won Prin<'e
Ci'ests in both river trout
categories and in June 1976 he
w<»i a. Prince Creel in the
river trout and lake trout
category.
This month. Erickson has
won three prince Crests.'
He won a chinook Prince
Crest for a 47-pound chinook
caught at Otter Point, and
two trout Prince Crests for a
3.10-pound cutthroat trout
from Nitnat River and a
14.4-pound ste^lhead fiom the
Nitinat River.
Prince Crests are awarded
each month for the 25 hea¬
viest fish in each of the three
saltwater categories and 15
heaviest freshwater fish in
each of the four categories.
Princess O’ests are awarded
to women anglers.
Family members figured
pniminenlly in the July
Prince Crests.
Tyee Prince Crests were
won by Edna and Bruce Lohr.
600 Normandy Road and Art
and Todd Moysychj-n, 1760
Mortimer Street.
Trout Prince Crests were
wtHi by Danny and Oiris Cw-
of Malibu. CaJifomie.
and Margaret and John Tate-
ham. 1295 Glyn Road.
Bass Prince Crests were
^\•on by Kevin. Bob and De-
laina Wilson. 43S4 Northridge
Crescent and Darren and
PVank Glover, 2011 Cook
Street.
Here are the Prince Crest
winners for Julyl
TYiE
Bernlf Griflithi, 3W Metchotin
Road; 44.4, Swala Reck,
Siingtilde.
Stapnan Stona, 23-39tl
Nilthorpt; 43.0, (^td Rlvar, Strip
Taaitr.
Roy Smith, 1t23Tampli Avenut:
42.12. Bligh Island, Tytt Oodgar
and Super Minnow Ttasar.
Frad Watarfield, Box 257,
Cumbarland; 42.2, Rock Bay,
Stingsilda.
Gordia Strongman. 254 Lindtn
Avenue. 42.0, Bligh Island, Strip
Teaser.
Fred Kroening, 2921 Yeta Tar-
race. 40-0, Sarlta Bay, Norsesitda.
Ltslia Vivian, 1431 Wande Road.
31.4, Nootka Sound, Strip Taaser.
6. Crochatt, 4050 Cedar Hill X
Road; 31 0, Sandford Island, Rhys
Oavis Strip Teaser.
Rob Lindsay, 1204 Faarct
Crescant; 31.0, Bligh Island, min¬
now.
Ralph Kraft, 322 Mcl^an,
Campbtli Rivtr; 31.0, Copper
Bluffs, cut plug herring.
E F. Elhs, 925 Sheerweter
Sfrtet; 37 4, Friendly Cove, Strip
Steaser.
E. H. Dye^ 17t1 Kaith Plact;
37.4, Friandiy Cova. Strip Teaser.
Marion Dahlin, Box 474, Gold
River; 34.0, Gold River, FlashfaiT.
Verne Polllser, 344 island
Highway; 35.12, Bligh Island, Tyea
Dodger end Super Minnow Teaser.
Jim Cummins, Box 225, Gold
River; 35.0, Gold River, Super
Minnow Teaser.
Edna Lohr, 400 Normandy
Road; 34.0, Bligh Island, anchovy.
Art Moysychyn, 1740 Mortimar
Sfrtet; 34.0, Hannah Channel her¬
ring.
Brian Davlln, 2341 Campbell
River Road, Campball Rivtr; 34.1,
Argonaut Wharf, barring.
Bruce Lohr, 400 Normandy
Road; 34.0, Bligh Island, anchovy.
Pat Dolan. 9105 Faber Road.
Port Alberni; 33.0, Mtaras Bluff,
Herring Strip Ttasar.
Jim Chaplin. 534 Baker Strtaf;
33.0, Bligh Island, Strip Taaser.
Bill Hill, 204-2530 Wark Slreet;
33.0. Gold Rlvar, Strip Taaser.
Glen Boyd, 1924 Powliuk Cres¬
cent. Sookc; 33.0, Copper Bluffs.
Herring Strip Teaser.
Don Dahlin, Box 104; 32.0. Gold
Rivtr, Strip Taaser.
R. Simpson, 2497 Peatt Road;
32.4, Gold River, Large Strip
Teaser.
SPRING (CHINOOK)
Robert Mcliroy. 593 Cedarcrest
Drive; 52.0, Offer Point, Minnow
Teaser.
Wally Kennedy, 559 Windthrop
Road, 49.0, Baechey Head. Rhys
Davis Minnow^ Teaser.
Chorkin Chan, 4590 Sumner
Place; 49.0, Baechey Head, min¬
now.
—Robert Ouffus photo
Don Erickson, Box 555, 2013
Church Road. Sooke, 47,0, Otter
Point, Tyaa Strip.
Wally Dicks, 201-1100 Esquimalt
Road; 43.3, Otter Point, minnow.
Ed Bradford, 351 Christophar;
42.12, Race Rocks, Strip Teaser.
John Fletcher, SO-1700 Newton
Street; 42.0 Becher Bay, Rhys
Davis Minnow Teaser.
^Kevtn Handspiker, 3352
Hazelwood Raod; 41 .t. Church
Rock, hooKhie.
Terry Budzak, R.R. 4, Sooka
Road; 41 0, Baachay Head, min¬
now.
Lloyd Tlnkham, 3408 Park
Oriva; 40.9, Albert Head, minnow
John Zacharies, 239 Manilas;
40.0, Beechay Head, minnow.
R. Lowrtnet, 90 Lurlina Avenue;
40.0, Baechey Head, anchovy.
George Wetherell, 1013 Wurtele
Place; 39.1, Baechey Head,
anchovy.
Joan Cooper, 429-200 Dallas
Road; 39.0, Otter Point
Raymond Ho. 2470 Cadboro Bay
Road; 39.0, Baechey Head, Krip-
pled Minnow.
James Chow, 40 Francis
Avanua; 39.0, Stcratary Island,
Strip Taaser.
Bob Cameron, 530 Prince
Robert Drive; 31.1. Bbachey Head,
Strip Teaser.
Phil, Hale 887 Tillicum Road;
38.8, Baechey Head, Minnow
Teaser.
Bob Jonas, 1045 Nicholson; 38.8,
Beechay Head, minnow.
George Brown, 937 Shirley
Road; 38.4, Otter Point, Herring
Strip Teaser.
Bob Hanson, 400 Obed Avenue;
38.0, Beechay Head, anchovy.
Randy Moss, 7079 RIchviaw
Drive; 38.0, SookI, Kripplad Min¬
now.
George Lehoema. 4202 Bilston
Place; 38.0.
Murray Stocks. S42 Joffrt; 38.0,
Trap Shack, Strip Teaser.
Hal Halikowski, 561 Ctdarcrast
Drive; 38.0, Aldridge Point.
Ross Bracken. 1747 Tiffin Place
38.0, Bftachay Head, anchovy.
COHO
Ted Hunt, til4 Donna; 13.12,
Chesterfield Rock, Wonder spoon.
Louie Cliff Podgorenko, 202-1345
Pandora Avenue, 12.1. Beechay
Head, anchovy.
B. Cramer. 2458 Forbes Street;
12.3. Baechey Head, Strip Teaser.
Kim Betlagente, R.R. 1, Becher
Bay Road; 12.0, Baechey Head.
Strip Teaser.
Warren L. Ward, 5142 Fbrrest
Road, Port Alberni; 12.0, Swale
Rock, Lucky Louie Plug.
Sid Upton, 4372 Parkside
Crescent; 12.0, Church Rock, min¬
now.
Ai Lewis, 170 Clio Avenue, 11.5,
Baechey Head. Flashtail.
E. Andrucko, 2451 Forbes
Street; 11.2, Beechey Heed, white
hootchie.
Dale Vincent, Box 413. Singing
Sands road, Lazo; 11.0, King
Coho, Buzz Bomb.
Pete Williams, 1040 Topaz; It.tT
Baechey Head, anchovy.
Tom Davies, 2153 Sunvala
Place; 10.9, Becher Bay, Radiant
Squirt.
Wally Parlstrom, 1127 McClure;
lO.t Beechey Heed, minnow.
Welly Ormiston, 411 Kelly Road.
10 8, Beechay Head, minnow.
Pater Newman, 2878 PicKtprd,
10.8, Baachay Htad, Strip Teeser.
Judith Ward, 5142 Forrest Road,
' on rMutrnI; *0.8, Bamflal.d,
Alaskan Plug.
Nor Baker, 1015 Wollaston; 10.5,
Beechey Head, anchovy.
P. K. Diggle, 2784 Fout Bay*
Road; 10.4, Discovery Passage,
herring.
Arthur Allison. 710 Daffodil;
10.5, Becher Bay, Strip Teaser.
Toni Henderson, 4540 Roy Roed;
10.4, Cabbage Island, hootchie.
B J. Bessembinders. 217-885
Craigflower Road; 10.0, Baechey
Head, anchovy.
Alfred Perri, 3149 Orillia; lO.a
Becher iBay, Rhys Oavis Minnow
Teaser.
Heinz Hetiwig, 4771 Eustace
Road, Sooka; 10.0, Secretary
island, Strip Teaser.
Bill Donaldson, East Sooke
Road; 10.0, Becher Bay, Buzz
Bomb.
Jamas W. Holstlne, Salmon
Point Resort, R.R. 1. Campball
Rlvar; 9.12, Bannatt's Point,
Hanry Smith.
Matfhaw Simpson, 2497 Peatt
Road; 9.12, Quadra Island. Strip
Taaser.
RIVER TROUT
(Other than staalhaad or Rain¬
bow)
John Youson, 784 Revilo Piece;
4.7, brown, Cowichen River, dry
fly.
Don Erickson, Bex 555. 2083
Church Road, Sooke; 3.10, cut¬
throat, Nitinaf River, worm.
Kevin Alexender, 724 Canter¬
bury Road; 3.8, cutthroat, West
Bay, fly.
Conrad Bobroske, S11-20tst
Street, Castlegar; 2.0, cutthroat.
Redder Bay, Stingsilda.
Dale Ashworth, 3947 West coast
Road; 2.0, cutthroat, seoke
AAanna. Spin 'n' Glo.
Dave Morgan, 451 Davida; 1.10,
cutthroat. West Bay, spinner.
Russ Herkas, 2948 Oriole Street;
1.4. cutthroet, fly.
Danny Cortazzo, 28147 Cliffsida
Drive, Malibu, California; 1.3. cut¬
throat, Menzies Bay, spinner.
Chris Cortezzo, 38847 Cliftside
Drive, Malibu, California; 1.0, cut¬
throat, Manzias Bay, spinner.
RIVER TROUT
(Staelfiaad or Rainbew)
Don Erickson. Box 555, 2083
Church Road, Sooka; I4.A Nitlnat
River, dew worm.
Jake Waldner, Box 312, Youbou;
13.8, Gordon River, fly.
Stan Kujala, R.R. 3, Lakashora
Road. Port Alberni; 8.IZ Stamp
River, Krocodile spoon.
Larry Pepper, Box 415, Lake
Cowichan; 7.14, Nitinat Rivtr,
Spin 'n' Glo.
Lealand Hurst, 203-122 Menzies
Street; 7.11, Nahmint River,
Krocodile spoon.
Danny Lee. 541 Churchill
Avenue. Nanaimo; .4.11, Toquart
River,'roe.
Tom Poison, 1509 Kcatmg X
Road, Brentwood Bay; 4.9 Harris
Creek, worm.
Robert Dunic. 155 Birch Road,
Sidney; 4.2, casting et mouth of
Sen Juan Bay, Krocodile spoon.
LAKE TROUT
Miiko Jadrasko, 4149 Bltnkin-
sop. 4.4, rainbow, Cowtehan Lake,
worm.
Anne Emde, 5734 Brown Road,
Port Alberni; 5.0, cutthroat, Greet
Central Lake, worm.
Ronald Thomsen. 1 -4487
Gertruda Street, Port Alberni; 4.8,
cutthroat. Great Central Lake,
worm,
AI Walton, 7936 Mount Wells
Drive; 4.7, cutthroat, Cowichan
.aka, spoon.
Bob Kennedy, 538 Fernridge;
4 0, Cameron Lake, Flatfish.
Bill Anderson. 4975 Gordon
Avenue, Port Alberni; 3.13, rain¬
bow, Sproat Lake, lake troll and
worm.
Margaret B. Tateham, 1295 Glyn
Road; 3.13, $t. Mary Lake, Willow
Leaf and worm.
John Tateham, 1295 Glyn Road,
3.13, St. Mary Laka, Willow Leaf
and worm.
Peter Wilson, 2417 Hilton Avenue
Port Alberni; 3.13, cutthroet.
Great Central Laka. worm.
William Anderson, 4975 Gordon
Avenue, Port Alberni; 3.12, Sproet
Leke, leke troll and worm.
Arvana Donay, 414 Youbou
Road, Youbou; 3-12, cutthroat,
Cowichan Lake, Willow Leaf-
Albert Richardson, 2910 Rhyllls
Street; 3.12, rainbow^. Branton
Laka, Willow Leaf troll |nd worm.
Sean Kennedy, 538 Pernridge;
3.4, Cameron Lake, worm.
Gordon Richards. 800 Royal Oak
Avenue; 3.4. rainbow. Elk Lake,
Flatfish.
Jerry Harach, 3924 Exton, Port
Aibarni; 3.3, rainbow. Sproat
Lake, Flatfish.
SMALL-MOUTH BASS
Kevin Wilson, 4384 Northridge
Crescent; 5.0, Prospect Lake,
worm.
George S. Baler, 2274 Moyes
Road, 4.4, Langford Lake, Hula
Popper.
Doug Patch, 944 Nicholson; 4.4,
Pros|>ect Lake, Cecil Jig.
Darrell Burnett, R.R. 1, Bland
Road, Port Alberni; 4.4, Quennell
Lake, worm.
John Jupe, 2304 Esther Place;
4.0, Langford-Lake, plastic worm.
Mildred A. Woltanden, 14-850 Ad¬
mirals Road; 4.0, Prospect Lake,
1*0-
Stephen Young, 433 Vanelman
Avenue, 3.1, Prospect Lake,
plastic worm.
D. W. Owens, 2901 Corfinna
Place; 3,4, Quennell Lake, Sin-
Satlon.
(barren Glover, 2011 Cook Street;
3.5, Quennell Lake, Flatfish.
L. P. Watson, 2703 Claude Roed;
3.5, Elk Lake, plastic worm.
Oialne Wilson. 4384 Northridge
Crescent; 3.4, Prospect Lake,
worm.
Frank Hanlon* 301*3985 Qu'Ap-
palla Street; 3.4, St. Mery Lake, ,
lizard.
Frank Glover, 2011 Cook Street;
3.1, Quennell Lake, Hula Popper.
R. E. Wallman, 4392 Ballson
Roed, Port Alberni; 3.0, Quennell
Lake, Flatfish.
Bob Wilson, 4384 Northridge
Crescent; 3.0, Langford Lake,
worm.
Vf COACH LINES
Bill Richurdi of Peelz Tackle and Ski Shoii draws tickets- ^,
A field day in July
Young angler* had a field
day in the July hidden-weight
draw of the King Fisherman
Contest hy wirmir^ three of
the top prizes.
Thsrteen-year-old Jerry
K n a d I e . Milne’.s l.Anding
Store, Sooke, won a fly fishing
outfit r-oosisting of a fly rod.
reel and line, for a 5.1-pound
rnho caught at Otter Point on
Strip Teaser and weighed at
Sooke Haitxir Marina.
'INvelve-year-old Ricky
Pahadmif, 151 Battfleford Ave-
rsue, won a trout rod for a
6.8- pound chinook caught at
Ramlberton on Snip Teaaer
and weighed ait^nglera An¬
chorage Marina. 1
Thirteen-year-old E1 d e n
Smitti, 6M7 Sooke Road,
Sooke, won a fly rod, reel and
line for a live^xHjnd chinook
taken at Secretary" Island on
Strip Teaser and weighed at
Sn^ Harbor Marina.
'ITie draw from tickets re¬
presenting 6.143 entries in
.luly was made by Bill Rich¬
ard.*, of Peetz Tackle and Ski
Shop, who will give a Petr
reel, rod and line to the Colo¬
nist subscriber catching the
heaviest coho during the slx-
tnonth-long contest.
.\rt Sarctricy, 1157 Bewdley
Avenue, won a Berkley Drift
fishing rod for a five-pound
Chinook caught at Fraser Is¬
land on anchovy and weighed
at Cheanuh Marina.
Phyllis Wood. 811 Stelly’s
<'iY)S8 Road. Brentwood Bay,
won a special hidden prize for
-women angler’s of a jlO scrip
from Eaton's, for a 16-pound
t hinook caught at 'Beechey
Head on anchovy and weighed
at Pacific Lions Marina.
Brian Cambridge, 4459 Casa
T.inda, won a tac^e box for a
1.9- p6und cutthroat trout from
Cowichan Lake on worm and
weighed at Ben’s Marina.
Fish cleaning and filleting
knives were won by R.. E.
Wallman. 1392 Ballson Road.
Port Alberni for a three-ixiund
TRAVEL
TORONTO
round trip by air
from Victoria,
Sopl. 7 onward,
t2M plus tn.
WILLIS TRAVEL
316-4312
small-mouth bass caught in
Quennell Lake on Flatfish
and weighed at Zuiderzee
Camipsiies. and Art Moysy¬
chyn, 1760 Mortimer Strel,
for R 15ix>und chino()k taken
in Becher Bay cm Strip Teaser
and weighed at Cheanuh
Marina.
Four angler.* have won sets
of five Danish Jensen drift
fishing lures, including two
models sif Piiks and three
models of Pirkens. They are
<»unter Koch, 410 Terrahue
Road, for a five-pound coho
caught at Beechey Head on
ancho\’y and weighed at
Cheanuh Marina; W. Fal¬
coner. 622 Baxter Avenue, for
a 5.5-f)Ound coho taken at
French Creek on minnow and
weighed at FYench Creek Re¬
sort; Denis Hamelin, Box 19.
Arrowsmith Heights. Port Al-
bemi. for a 2.4-fK)iuid small-
mouth bass caught in Quen¬
nell I^ake on worm and
weighed at Zuiderzee Camp¬
sites; and Bob Hen.*on, 400
Obed Avenue. for an
11.8pound chinook caught at
Beehey Head on anchovy
and weighed at Pacific Lions
Marina.
Six sets of four assorted
Rhys Davis Teaser lures were
won by Don Erickson. Box
5%, Sooke, for a 3.10-pound
cutthroat trout from Nitinat
River on worm and wrighed at
Bluenose Sporting Goods; Ron
Giles, .1334 Wickheim Road,
for an 11.8-pound chinook
frr»m 'Beech^ Head on green
hootchie and weighed at
Cheanuh Marina; Gord
Ferris. 837 Admirals Road;
for a 5.5-pound coho caught at
Brotchie Ledge on a Henry
Smith Special and weighed at
James Bay Anglers' Associa¬
tion; Fred Wood. 811 Sicily’s :
Cross Road. Brentwood Bay, :
for a 6.6*pound coho caught in i
Becher Bay on Strip Teaser
and weighijd at Pactfic Lirms ,
Marina; Fred Pritchard, 1336
Tennyson Street. fdr a ;
.“j-S-pound coho caught off the j
kelp bed in Pedder Bay on ,
anchovy and weighed at Ped¬
der Bay Marina; and Carl I
Buckner. R.R. 2. Mae Belle *
Road. Port Alberni. for a I
6.2-pound coho cau^t at l^s-
queti Isl^id on a yellow and
white Flashtail and weighed
at Beachcomber Marina.
Four anglers w’on dinners
for two at the Dominion Ho¬
tel's Terra Cotta Room. They
are D. W .Owens, 2901 Oor-
rinne Place, for a one-pound
small-mouth bass caught in
Quennell l.ake on plug and
weighed at Zuiderzee Camp¬
sites; Margaret Sturrock, 1591
Earle Place: for a 6.7^)ound
coho caught near the Camp¬
bell River bell buoy on gold
hootchie and weired at Big
Rock Store; Margaret Tate¬
ham, 1295 Glyn Road, ibr a
3.7-pound trout from St. Mar\' |
Lake taken on Willw Leaf [
troll and worm; and Maria j
Gundersen. 1626 McMorran, |
for a five-pound chinook
catiglu at Beechey Head on [
anchovy and \veighed at Pa¬
cific Lions Marina.
Winners will either have
their prizes delivered to them
or be informed how they may
collect them.
FOR
TRAVEL
INSURANCE
P. R. Brown and tona
Ltd.
762 Fort tt
m-a425
HAWAII SPECIAL
14-DAY TOUR $425
FROM
I VICTORIA
NOV. 7-21
Iand dec. 5
■Y PWA
Horaon Holiday Tour
iMvaa Victoria by Pacilic Waatarn
Air Lma lo Vancouvar and con-
nacu with P W A. lor Honolulu, with
welcoma grealings. bus trana-
poflatlon to WaiKIki Surf Hotai.
baggaga handling and ponaraga
with many axiraa and go^iaa.
Sea ma for ragular dapartura dales
at reducad fares.
OFFICE HOURS 10-12.2-S
Ilf 6E0ReE
Willis TRAVEI
383-1232
:L
OREtdil fiAAtr
SeptSlolO OMo-tltOM.
8 dty* Twin $180 M.
The beauliiul Oregon cosst has
something for everyone — pounding
Pacific surf — rocky headlands —
miles and miles of sandy beaches.
Two nights on the beach in Lincoln
City. Then the ever fascinating
coastline all the way (b Crescent
City. Caiifomia Sea laon Craves.
Sand Dunes and the exciting dune
buggy ride. On the way home we stop
for an evening ui Portland.
LAKE CHELAN
8apl.14lo17 Db1a.8ll0.aa.
lya Twin 8120. aa.
A vtfv poDular and scenic tour. We
start off with tha aear scanic farry
trip through the San Juan s to
Anacortes. Overnight and a morning
shopping in Bellingham Then the
.scenic North Cascade highway. Two
nights at lovely Campbell Lodge, on
the lake. Vhut Ohme Alpuia Gardens
and the interesting Bavarian Village.
CANYOhLANDS
OctItaU ' DWa.8850.aa.
14 days Twin 8800. aa.
A trip that you will remember. A
photographers dream. Plunging
Walls ^ granite, weired nx^ forms-
Uons. The Grand Canyon — the
painted desert — the goose necks —
Arches National Park. Two nights at
Moab The Colorado river by boat
aflN dark (price not incl.) Las
Vegas and Salt Lake City two nighU
at each. Do not nuss this tnp.
..B.C. TRAVEL
No. 11,-Mt fort it. J»4rif
Houra to 11 ani 1 M I.
ESCORTED TOORS
RENO — RENO — RENO
Eviri SHWy hi SifiMiW mU Odtkir — tlSS.OO Nth tlnrlii|.
OHAWA. MONTREAL. NIASAHA
FALLS. TORONTO A QUEBEC CIH
August 29 and September 18
21 days Coach/Air $769.CX) each sharing
lilxptore C^anada's scanic grandeur from the mighty Rockies to the quaint
charm of Old Quebec City, vialt Niagara Falls, one of the natural wonders of
the world and Uien view the C.N. Tower in Toronto, the world's tallest free
standing structure. Fully lacorted from Victoria barti to Victorls.
SAN FRANCISCO. OISNEYLANO ind US VE6AS
September 28. 12 days $270.00 each sharing
Due to popular demand we have arranged for another coach on Uiis tour which
includes a enuse on San Francisco Bay and a full day In Reno, but hurry as
tins coach is alre^y half lull.
ADAMS RIVER FALL FOLIAGE
October 9.4 Days $114.00 each sharing
See Ihe beauty of’SouUiern B.C. in the specUcular fall colors, cruise on
Shuswap Lake and watch the spawning of sockeye salmon at Adam* River
More returning home via the North Caacades highway and BelUngham.
SAN FRANCISCO - PALM SPRINGS
October 24,14 days $330.00 each sharing
This popular tour also includes the chartning Danish styled village of Soivang.
three ni^u aboard Ihe mighty Queen Mary" Tijuana, Disneyland and.the
giant Redwood foreau. ^
PORTIAND
Novem ber 11. 3 days $64.00 each sharing
The Ideal tour for those Christmas shopping bargains
CHRISTMAS LIGHTING
CEREMONY lltmuMiiiii
December 3,3 cays $70.00 each sharing
Relive the Christmas of yester*yaar at the Bavarian Village in Leavenworth,
Washington.
CHRISTMAS IN THE CARIBOO
December 24,4 days $140.00 each sharing
Includes all meals while at 188 Mile Motor Lodge Make this a Christmas lo
remember in beautiful C^ariboo Country, where you can ski. skate, take a
sleigh ride, or Just relax around a roaring log (ire. Book early as accommoda¬
tion is strictly limited.
PASADENA ROSE PARADE
December 27,12 days $344.00 each sharing
6ee the fabulous flaae Parade. Univeraal Studios. Disneyland, Tijuana, las
Vegas, and Reno.
DAY
TOURS
Reservations by ticket only)
"ROYAL HUDSON" TO SQUAMISH $22.50 NCk
ISoeclal ratal for aanlor cltlzans, atudants and chlldran.)
August 26, September 11 and September 25
HURRICANE RIDGE Septembers 113.50 Met
BEUIRGHAM September 18 118.00 Mlt
PACIFIC NATIONAL EXHIBITION $18.00 mcI
August 27. August 28. September 3 end September A (Children
under 12—$13.50 each)
FOR AOOinONAl INFORMATION PUARE CAU
385-2467 912 DOUGLAS STREET
.2, SERVING VANCOUVER ISLAND SINCE 1928
B C. PARLOUR CAR TOUR DIVISION
•’ I-" ‘ J-y
. ' IcVf-.J .f •'
jf'
REGAL
HOLIDAY
TRAVEL
TOURS
TO:
• DISNEYLAND
• RENO/lAB VEBA8
• HAWAII
• MEXICO
For Infermetlon pleaee ceil
or eeme In end eeo ue.
Mon.-Frt.. 8 •.m.-8 p.m.
Aleo Open Set 10 ejn.-2 p.in.
760III0U6HT0N
8-21
AT
Cniitsli
Niw
Zsalini
Autrilli
South Ssis
You can aniey mo most ftbulouo, popular,
and intoroatinQ cruiso to tho South 8oaa
aboard ma Manpoaa or Montaray from
Hawaii to Mooraau: Tahiti, Parotonga.
Auckland, Bay of islands and Bydnay
Than raturn by Fi|l. Niualo'ou, Fape hago.
■to Honolulu and Fly homo.
Tnaaa luxurloua sNpa ara your homo lar
32 days of comfort with wondarlul masia
and anlarialnmam.
You can maka Iha round Ulp or dioam-
bark st Nsw Zaaland or Australia. Baa us
lor daiaiis snd faraa with bsautitui
brochuras.
Viail tha Montaray at tha Ouiar Wharf.
AuQuai 24. Oat boarding paaa at our of-
Your Cro/ee Travol Agant
Office Houre: 10.1A $-•
W BEORBE I
iliis TRAVE L
l247E«|MaiNM. ISHZ3Z
Planning a trip?
Slratoh your budgat with IMe
2-piece
Luggage Set
only
39e99
S‘.
This lightweight, good-
looking sat Is a Matty nice
way to atretch your travel
budget. Sleek, continental
styling In hardy, expandable
vinyl reinforced with buckles
and vinyl strips for added
strength. Set consists of one
large and one small case, or
two medium size cases.
Choose tan, blue.
Luggaga. (Alain)
“l^ulisciTtelSaQ, (Ebmpang
f
CHRISTMAS CHARTERS
lo
TORONTO and MONTREAL
DaparUng Oac. 21,22,23,24
TORONTO $279.00
MONTREAL $299.00
• FliQht* dapart Vanoouvar to Niagara Patta. N.Y„ and busad to
Toronto. Montraal tiighta land In Burlington, Varmont, and buaad to
Montreal.
• Montraal ttightB are aubjaot to govarnmant approval. Toronto liighta
are govarnmant approved
■OOK lARLY AND DONT ■■ OIMPPOINTIO
BAINS
INTERNATIONAL
TRAVEL
SERVICE LTD.
1710 DOUQ^AS STREET (acroaa from The Bay)
Ta4.: 306-6383
CARIBBEAN AND
SOUTH AMERICA
14-DAY CRUISES
OEPAimillE
BATES; DEC. B. U. Jm. B. 20. Fife. 3. 17. RM 8. 17. 31. AprN 14
VISITING: Montego Bay. Santo Domingo, San Juan. St.
Thomas, Antigua, Martinique. Barbados, Caracus, Curacao,
Aruba. Cartagena.
Call the cniite ipeclaiiati at Wlllii Travel
\^IL1IS TRAVEL SERVICE
38S-1533 S78 Yates Si Victoria BC 38S-43I3
Budget Travel Is
delighted to announce
the appointment of
ChrlstI Seiner as
“Travel Consultant."
ChrlstI received her
travel training with
Thomas Cook, has
lived and worked In
Europe, and travelled
around the world. Her
considerable knowl¬
edge In the travel
Industry coupled with
her own travel experi¬
ence make ChrlstI an
expert travel agent.
“ALL GOOD THINGS START WrTH BUDGET TRAVE“
BUDGET TRAVEL
Ml Johneofl 8t
Victoria, B.C. s -21 3M-7121
ORIENT
DBCOVERCTOUR
FULLY ESCORTED FROM VICTORIA
NOVEMBER 1 TO NOVEMBER 21. 1976,
VISIT
The Philippines -
Bali ■ Singapore - Bangkok •
Hong Kong ■ Japan
FEATURES
MAN ILA Welcome Fiesta Philippina Dinner Allair at Sulo Restaurant •
Philippino loikdances and folksongs Intramuros ■ Fort Santiago •
Manila Cathedral - American War Memorial - Las Pinas - Tagaylay
Ridge BALI; The Island ol Gods, dances and festivities A legend m
Itself SINGAPORE Rallies Square - Ml Faber • Haw Par Villa •
Rallies Night' - Tiger Balm Gardens • Buddhist Temple ol a
Thousand Lrghts. BANGKOK Entertainment by beieweled Thai
Dancers - Royal Palace including the magniliceni Funeral Hall and
aslonishing Throne Hall - Wal Phra Keo's Compound • The Emerald
Buddha HONG KONG Suzie Wong's Wan Cahi waterlront disiricl ■
Tiger Balm Garden • ride the world famous Iram up Victoria Peak
Repulse Bay ■ Aberdeen Frshing Village TOKYO Imperial Palace
Plaza ' National Diet Building - Mei|i Shrine Outer Garden - Asak usa
Shopping Arcade ■ Optional Tour lo Nrkko available
TOUR INCLUDES
Aiilarelrom Victoria, lelurn- Hotel accommodation - 2 meals per day
basis (hreaktast and lunch or dinner daily) ■ All sightseeing - liansfers ■
entrance lees ■ taxes and charges
FOtt FURTHER DETAILS CALI THE TOUR SPECIALISTS
^aysb ore
iravel
1622 GOVERNMENT ST VICTORIA BC TELEPHONE 382-7103
ON THE GO with Gerry Hulse
*
Operation Whiz Bang
English holidajy, 14 days:
3649.'
It's a small ad whh a bdg
following. ’
“Our single moat pcnmlar
tour." confides the man whd
sells it.
The highlights; Sight-seeing
in London and historical Eng¬
land (Winchester. Stondtenge,
Salisbury. Bath, ^stol,
Stratford-Uixm-Avon, Chel¬
tenham, Oxford. Blenheim
Palace and Gloucester), first-
class hotels, full English
breakfast daily.
“How can yoii beat it?"
asks Mike Alford. America's
renowned People Mover.
PeopHe Mover, indeed. In
the last 20 years Alford has
sent scurrying to distant des¬
tinations more than one mil¬
lion travellers who might oth¬
erwise never have strayed
from Bellflower or beautiful
downtown Builwik.
Dealing in volume, he offers
dozens of inexpensive tour
packages to Europe, Hawaii,
the Orient, Africa, South
America, Mexico and the .
South Pacific. '
Another of his tours reads:
MazatiM. seven nl^ts,
Playa Hotel (right on the
beach) , $199. Includes
transfers, portage fees, wel¬
come coclrtail party, sight¬
seeing.
Alford’s groups can choose
between Hong Kong (two
weeks, $599), Hawaii (eight
days. $262) or New Yoric ($169
round trip).
Other offers would fill a cat¬
alogue.
Only there’s a catch. (Sigh).
Always is. (Sigh). You’ve got
to belong to Alford’s Club Uni¬
verse.
Ho-hum. Anyone have $5?
That’s the cost of a mem¬
bership. What’s more, you
needn’t belong to the Ladies’
Daffodil Society or the Men’s
Qub of Peoria to qualify.
Universe is a nimaffinily
fun chib.
"Ihe biggest bargain in
travel," Alford says assured¬
ly-
As a result, this year more
than 100,000 Californians will
be jetting overseas to dozens
of exotic destinations: Seville.
Tangier, Zurich, Vienna,
Monte Carlo, Grendble. Pra¬
gue. St. Moritz, Oslo, Amster¬
dam, Tokyo, Bangkdc, Sin¬
gapore. New Delhi, Bali,
Hong Kong, Machu Picchu,
Rio, Buenos Aires, Puerto
Vallarta, Acapulco.
The list goes on.
Alford’s venture into the
charter travel field began in
1968 when he founded Uni¬
tours. the parent company of
Qub Universe. Bom in Ger¬
many and educated in Eng¬
land. Alford bankrolled his
(^ration with $1,000.
After this he went after
groups — employees of the
Department of Water and
Power, Douglas Aircraft and
others.
With an armful of brochures
and film* to whet the appe¬
tite, he appeared before
groups during their lunch
hours and evenings, pitching
his product — the che^e
tour to romantic places. At a
time when the going rate for
independent travel to Europe
was ^,000, Alford was book¬
ing SOMlay tours for only $800.
Soon convoys of Califor¬
nians filled the heavens be¬
tween the United States and
their overseas destinations.
Europe vwas No. 1 among Al¬
ford’s affinity groups.
He operat^ Lodcheed Con¬
stellations to New York, DC-
6s to Hawaii and Boeing Strap
tocrulsers to Europe.
The old propeller planes
flapped along at speeds which
seem unbelievably alow to V>
day’s jet-age travellers. The
elapsed flying time to New
York was 13 hours; it took
another 15 grueling hours to
reach Europe.
By contrast, today's
Rules on charters
expected to ease
OTTAWA (CP) — The Ca¬
nadian transport commission
is proposing changes to its
air charter rules that would
allow lower prices and trips
of shorter duration for pack¬
aged holiday tours.
The commission announced
it is asking Canadian airlines
and tour operators to com¬
ment on the proposals by
Sept. 13 so new inclusive tour
charter ITC rules can be in¬
troduced for the coming
N^inter peak season.
ITCs arc packageed trips
covering air transportation
and accommodation organized
and marketed by tour opera¬
tors.
Leonard Nathan, vice-
president of Suntours Ltd. of
Toronto, said he was pleased
with the proposals which
should lower prices for tra¬
vellers. But he was upset with
the timingi which he said was
late for tour operators who
have already prepared au¬
tumn tours.
Under existing ITC rules,
tour prices must be at least 15
per cent higher than the
lowest regular air fare be¬
tween the points involved.
The new ndnlmum price
would be based on the actual
cost of flying the traveller
plus $15 a night. For children
under 12 accompanying an
adult, the nightly rate would
be a minimum $7.50.
Under current rules, tours
must last a minimum seven
days for destinations within
Canada, the United States, the
Caribbean, Mexico and On-
tral America. For oflier
foreign locations, the mini¬
mum stay is 10 days in winter
and 14 days in summer.
The commission it prop<^
ing to reduce these minimums
to 72 hours for Canada, the
U.S.. the Caribbean. Mexico.
Central America and the
north shore of South America
and to seven days for other
destinations throuhoul the
year.
One lour operator said the
changes could mean a $50
saving on a $250 trip for one
week to the (^ribbean islands
for the (Canadian traveller.
Similar changes w'ere In¬
troduced in the U.S. a year
ago. The commission propos¬
als would again allow Canadi¬
an operators to sell U.S.-
Canada tours on an equal
tooting with American agen¬
cies.
Nathan sai^ that lowering
the minimum trip duration to
three days should make
places like Las Vegas more
attractive to holiday tra¬
vellers.
"A week there and you
would go out of your mind.”
BLANEY’S TRAVEL
CIRCLE
PACIFIC CRUISE
Depart from San Franchco on Wednei-
day, February 9th, 1977 aboard the oleek
Royal Viking Sky for 68 adventuroui days,
returning to San Francbco, on April 20th,
1977.
Arrangemenb in conjunction with this
cruise, have been made, for an optional
threenlay Overland Tour, to the People's
Republic of China.
Call In to "The Anangen" at
Blaneyt Travel, for additional
detaib and retervatiom.
CONTACT;
BLANEY’S TRAVEL SERVICE
LTD.
tao DOUGLAS tTRBtT ISOS WILMOT PLACB
Si2-72S4 fOS-ASSI
^ B-21
members <tf Gub Universe jet
nonstop to the Continent in
lOH hours aboard luxurious
747 Jumbos. DC-<L0 b and TDTs.
After conquering Europe.
Alford opened the way in 1960
for inexpensive tours to Ha¬
waii. Using DG6 prop planes,
he sold two-week vacations to
four islands for $369.
A couple of years later he
began operating the first
charters ever between the
United States and Tahiti.
Alford was selling Polynesia
for peanuts to hundreds of ad¬
venturers.
He follofw’ed up his Europe¬
an and Pacific operations by
opening up an entirely dif¬
ferent ma^et, this time con¬
centrating on cruises.
With a chartered ocean
liner, toe Theodor Herlzl, he
began promoting inexpensive
voyages between Los Angeles
and Acapulco, visiting Mazat-
Ian and ^lerto Vallarta —
just as a plethora cruise
ships do today.
Occasionally the shh> would
steam on to Guatemala and
Panama.
When Alford arrived from
England in the late 'SOs. he
saw an "unbelievable mar¬
ket" for the low-cost travel
package. Employing knowl¬
edge he’d gained as a guide
and huckster in Ekirope, he
kicked wide open the door to
the wholesale charter pro¬
gram. offering tours to "prac¬
tically anytiody who wished to
go."
Soon so many ot Alford’s
rented fmop planes took to the
^es. it lo^ed like an in¬
vasion all over again of post¬
war Europe.
Alongside Alford’s Opera¬
tion Whiz Bang, the Berlin
Airlift seemed like a Boy
Scout manoeuvre.
By now Californians were
lined up at the enteipreneur’s
door. Gutching fistfuls of
money, they were asking the
Dream Merchant to make
theirs come true.
During the 1960s Alford
foresaw the end of the affinity
bugaboo, surmising correctly
that soon the OAS would ap¬
prove charter privileges for
the masses, not just the fortu¬
nate few who could claim re¬
lationship with a specialized
group : IGwanians, pea
pickers, crop dusters, street
sweepers, bee keepers, ad in¬
finitum.
« This opened an entire
new world for the urbane
Mike Alford. Shifting gears,
he formed Gub Universe to
give everyone a go at the
low-cost charter. Just plunk
down $5 and you’re one of the
gang.
After this members begin
receiving regular newsletter*
as well as bulletins detailing
new and inexpensive tours.
Besides being a super sales¬
man. Alford is a master toow^
man. Until a couple of years
ago he produced lavish stage
extravaganzas featuring
dancers from Hawaii and Ta¬
hiti as well as Kabuki stars
from Japan who i>erformcd
before packed audiences at
the Gireek Theatre and Santa
Monica Gvic Auditorium.
There were $150,000 produc¬
tions which AVard and Co.
took on tour to 25 U.S. cities.
The shows were free. The
pitch, of course, was travel.
As the curtain came down,
the audiences reacted as Al¬
ford had predicted they
would, signing up for tours to
exotic destinations around the
world.
Last year Alford phased out
the stage shows, turning the
spotlight instead on TV spe¬
cials he’s been producing on
cable statiOTs. shows he hopes
to take to regular commercial
channels next year.
Beginning as a three-man
operation, Alford’s organiza¬
tion now has representatives
in New York. Washington,
Giicago, Dallas, Toronto,
Honolulu, Tokyo, Taipei,
Seoul, Manila. Hong Kong,
Kuala Lumpur. Singapore,
Delhi, Tel Aviv, Athens.
Rtxne, Madrid, Paris, Lon¬
don. Auckland and Sydney.
In addition to Gub Universe,
the parent company (Uni¬
tours) opetrates travel bu¬
reaus to 25 May Go. stores
throughout southern Califor¬
nia as well as others in north¬
ern Califomla department
stores.
Alford’* operation U
successful for a couple of rea¬
sons : Volume sales and a low
profit margin.
"We work like a sigier^
market." he said.
Wth the exception of Fri¬
day and Saturday, free travel
Aims are screened dally at
Gub Universe headquariers,
1671 Wilahire Bhd., to
members and ncxi-members.
Like the stage spectaculars
and TV Shows, the idea is to
create an urge to get up and
go, hopefully with Gub Uni¬
verse.
FALL HOLIDAYS
Clioose one of Uie following fine trips lor your autumn break.
Whether you wish to be away 3 days, 4 days, 8 days or two
weeks, we have something for you:
LABOR DAY WEEKEND
8«pt. 4 3 Day* 375 (sharing)
'A relaxing time, not too far from home. An opportunity to
shop a bit and enjoy the scenery as we circle majestic Mount
Ranier. We spend two nights at the lovely Sherwood inn,
Tacoma.
FALLCOLORTOUR
Sapl. 26 6 Days 6180 (sharing)
With the mountains and forests a riot of color and the tourist
crowds departed, this is the time to enjoy the beauty of the
country-side: Radium Hot Springs, Banff, Jasper, Lake
Louise and two relaxing nights at the new and exciting “Mile
108 Lodge ' at Round-up Time.
THANKSGIVING WEEKEND
Oct. 9 3 Days $73 (sharing)
Using the "Off beat' roads to explore the beauty of Van¬
couver tsiand: (Jualicum, Campbell Fiiver (with a fine
Thanksgiving Dinner included), tJold River, Cathedral
Grove and Cameron Lake, etc. Three colorful, relaxing days
with friends.
CALIFORNIA SUNSHINE
OcL 16 14 Days 6320 (doubts)
For those with more time, this tour takes in the scenic
beauty of Washington, Oregon and Sunny California: the
Giant Redwood Forest. Intriguing San Francisco, the El-
Camino Trail with its colorful Missions, Fascinating
Disneyland, Historically interesting San Diego and, a few
challenging hours bargain hunting in Tijuana, Mexico.
PORTLAND AND THE OREGON COAST
Nov. 11 4 Days $7S(aharing)
Make the best of a long weekend viewing the West side of the
Olympic Peninsula, portions of the rugged Oregon Coast,
relaxing in the glamorous Thunderbird Lodge, Portland and
pre-Christmas Shopping at Lloyds Centre and the Northgate
Mall, Seattle. A great break.
CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR TOURS
it's not too early to plan for this busy season. Whether it's a
four-day trip to Portland over the Christmas Season (Dec.
23) or a two-week trip to sunny California (Dec. 27) to take in
the glamorous, exciting Pasadena Rose Parade, now is the
time to plan. Phone in, get the details and be sure to avoid
disappointment.
Call Iht holiday numbtr Capital
384-1432
Tours
403-645 Fori StrMt, Victoria
(4th Floor, Yorrow Bldg.)
‘KELAX^
That’! what a vacation is all about and the
greatest way to relax is to get away from the
bustle and bastle, the proverUal rat race.
Ttaii year do It at yoar own speed. We have maay fly/cmite holidays to choooe
from—and you save up to 3206.00 when we fly yon to your cruise ship embarkation
port. Phone today lor a free brodbore on Cruises to Mexico, the Bahamas, the
Mediterranean, or the Soath Padfle.
and
WHinOME’S TRAVEL
J. H. Whittoma and Co. Ltd.
Make 1976 Your Turn to
“See by Sea’’
“RELAX"
1111 Blanihtrd
StrMt Victoria
Alio In Duncan
126 Station StrMt
3884271
748-3128
new
horizon HOLIDAYS
ivaii
Two-laland Maui/WaikIki or
Two Waekt In Fabulouo Waikiki
PRICES FROM *399 10*569
(9 Sharing Hoorn)
INCLUDES: Round trip Air Transportation
• Choloa of hotal In axclting Waikiki
• Aloha waloonfta and lal o^ti»9
• Airport tronsfara « Walcoma lunch with
ontailalnmant • Two (aland holldaya alto
Inoluda intar-ltland airfara, iranafara and
choloa of Maui hotal or condimlnium
DtPARTURE OATES FROM VANCOUVER:
Octobor 10.17,24,31;Novembor7.14,21,28:
Docomhor 8, 12.
CLEARWATER
FLORIDA
Enjoy a wondarful Holiday
on tho DazxIIng Boaehoa ol
PlorMa'a Sunny Waat Coaat
TWO aHARINO ONLY *519
inoludaa round trip Air Transportation by Air
Canada Schodulad Flights. 1 night Toronto.
13 nights Hilton Inn Claarwatar Batch,
Airport transfara, Sightoating.
DIPARTURE DATES: October 9.23;
Novambar 7. 20; Dacambar 4.
Come with
us to the
Sun
This
Fall
PRICES FROIi4:
*288 10*308
(2 Sharing Room)
Enjoy a World of Maka
Balisva and Fantasy.
Hollywood Studios,
Bsvtrly Hills and th#
Wondarful Sunohlns of
Southarn California.
Rig. Big hoductlon* for 3 or more Shoring Room
09 WON 00 for ChlWron undor 12 Vooro.
mCLUOCS: Round Trip Atrforo by Schoduiod Plights
• Choteo Romh Holol • Wolcomo Brookfott
• Akporl Tronofors • Dokiio IS Oitnoylond lickol
book Including two onironcos ond IS otirocllono
DEPARTURE DATES FROM VANCOUVER:
S«p:*mber 11,26; Ootobof #, 23; Novomher 6,28; •
0»c«mb«f 4.
FUU COLOUR BROCHURES,
INFORMATION AND
BOOKINGS FROM:
Your Local Travel Agent
6
#
' t
TRAVELEYDEN
RENO
We don't need a big ad to leH you
all Ibe possibilities ol Reno
3 Days by Air t166.50 flM Tu
via Seattle from Victoria
7 Days by Air t!99.00 pin Tu
direct from Victoria
7 Days by Bus
from Victoria
ALL INCLUDING HOTELS
REPRESENTING A GUARAN¬
TEEING ALL COMPANIES
“WINNERS" BOOK WITH
TRAVELEYDEAI
CALL DIANNt
HAWAI11977
3WEEKERS
’ Air fares from Victoria
return
> Hotel accommodations
with kitchens
' Full 21 nites and can be
extended
$520
Ian. 10 — Ian. 31
Ian. 31 — Feb. 21
Feb. 14 - Mar. 7
Mar. 24 — Apr. 4
768
FORT ST.
REST
Fall Tour Schedule 1976
Sept. SOLD . .Reno 7 Days
Oct. 16-22nd . .'..Reno 7 Days
Oct. 16-23rd . .Reno 8 Days
Only a few seats left for Oct. trips
Nov. 6-12th . .Reno 7 Days
Oct. 1-10th . San Francisco.
Las Vegas, Reno. 10 Days (Royal Canadian
Legion Tour).
Dec. 27-Jan. 3rd . New Years
Reno Party. 8 Days.
IN VICTORIA PHONE 595-58S4 anytime.
IN NANAIMO PHONE 753-8833
GO BY BUS, LEAVE THE R E S T. TO US
TO
RENO
*199
00
EACH TWIN OR DOUBLE
via Picific Wastam Airlinas Boeing 737
from Victoria Intarnatlonar Alrp<frt
(7daya) Sapt 12,19,2a, Oct. 3,10,17
A. RENO, 7days, $199.00(Umlled Space Letl)
B. RENO, 5days,-LAKE
TAHOE, 2 days, $219.00
D. LAS VEGAS, 5 days - LAKE
TAHOE, 2 days.
E. SAN FRANCISCO, 3 days — RENO, 4 days
OR FLY FROM VANCOUVER
via Pacifle Waatam to
LAS VEQAt (7 days) from Vancouver Sept. 19. 26. Oct. 3.
11. 17
HAWAII (14 days) (double or twin accommodation) Oct. 4,
18. Nov. 1. 15 — $379, Dec 13, 27. Jan. 10. 24. Feb. 7. 21.
March 7 — $469.
FLORIDA AND BAHAMAS Fly/Cruise (14 days) Sept.
19. Oct. 17. Jan. 16. 23. 30, Feb. 6. 13. Mar. 6. 20
BUS
ALL-FUN HOLIDAYS
RENO; (7 days) from Victoria. 8125 each, motel,
8138 each, hotel, double or niln accommodation.
Every Saturday from Aug. 21 to Oct. 23.
CALIFORNIA: 15 days, departs Vancouver Sept. 4, 11,
Oct. 2. 9. 23.
MARITIME8: ir <Jay. (tly/bua) from Vancouvar Sapl. 4,2S
SAN FRANCISCO — RENO (9 days) from Vancouver.
Oct. 9
For brochuroe or Into on prtcoe, etc.,
PHONE YOUR
TRAVEL AGENT
ALL-FUN TRAVEL
2820 QUADRA
VICTORIA
382-4271
At
Rhine’s
friendly
vintners
By .lOHN PINKERMAX
RUDESHEIM (C3VS)
Almost every city ui West
Germiany claims its inhabi¬
tants to be “a different kind
of German." The general idea
seems to be that ‘ different^’
means better, friendlier, more
hospitable.
The people of this fascinat¬
ing city of 8.000. right on tlie
famous Rhine River and all
the beauty bKh sides of the
busy stream, might he the
t>nes who are really ‘dif¬
ferent."
Mosi of them are involved
in the wnne business, cither
tending the 7(X) aci'cs of vines
that literally climb the steep
slopes up to S.OOO feet or mak¬
ing tlie wine or selling it - or
drinking it in the dozens of ex¬
citing wine houses that dot
the riverfront streets and
alleys leading off the main
avenue.
I They boast that Rudesheim
I is one of the most famous
I wine toAvns in the "world, with
I sjiecial attention given for its
! outstanding German brandy,
i They also boast, in proof of
1 their town’s fame, that 2.5
million visitors eat. drink and
I he merry here CNiery year.
I They arrive from most Euro¬
pean countries by car and
from all o\er the world by
train and Rhine River
steamer.
The Romans started the
' wine business in the early
j 13th century and there are
buildings and ruina froon that
' era still to be seen. One is the
I EhrCTifels castle.
' Built in 1208. it still domi¬
nates the town.
PAULIN TRAVEL
have
MOVED
Just around the corner to
532 BROUGHTON STREET
Call In at our new location where the same friendly
staff look forward to serving you. _
SpBCiolisI* in lnt*rnotlonal Trovvl
PauHnTravel
532 BBOUCHTON STBEBI / Telephone 16011 3B2 9168
Puerto VaDaita
Rhine tourists stop over in Rudesheim
One of the most e.xciling
places or areas to visit here is
the Drosselgasse. a narrow
uphill alley leading off the
main riverside street. It is
packed on both sides by wine
houses, sausage stands and
occasional curio .shops. It is
Cftnfusion personified during
the daylight hours and ullcr
bedlam after dark.
Mobs throng place after
place and this is the time the
good peojile of Rudeshein dis¬
play their unabated good na¬
ture. They welcome strangers
like brothers and don't be too
concerned if ample quantities
of wine are responsible for
their gregarious nature. They
laugh at authority, even their
own Oerman authority and
they IK*® their days in the
same manner as tourists do
— eat, drink and be merry.
Thei'C are a few things here
beyond the wine, hoiwever.
and one is the spectacular
viesv you get from the aerial
cable-way that goes from the
Seilbahn trojie station) to the
Niederwald, location at 3.500
feet of the famous (kinnania
Monument, a 32-foot statue
set atop VI elaborate base
that commands a view of the
Rhine River Valley for man>'
miles. The monument was
completed in 1883 to mark the
unification of the German em¬
pire.
Returning b>' cable car. a
\-teitor may want to visit an
interesting establishment
called the Musik-salon.
It is located in a Ixmse built
Flying a time machine
to Papua New Guinea
in 1420 and features exhibits
of all kinds and sizes of self-
playing mechanical musical
instruments. The unique ex¬
hibits are presided over by a
liearded impressario named
Siegfried Wendel. He is a1-
tiied in black hat. beard and
formal frock attire — except
his bare chest shows through
where a shiri should be. Bui.
he Ls as hos(>itab}e as the wine
drinkers and merchants, and
his exhibit is wxjrth an hour of
anybody's time.
But, it may be near dinner
time now', and that might in¬
clude a session in wdne tasting
if you are lucky. The ex¬
cellent dinner might be at the
Hotel Aumueller and your
"teacher” in wine tasting
mi^t be Edmund R. Xfedel.
He will offer you five kinds to
compare and provide the
bread to dull the taste of one
before you try another.
$160
y by traveling
during the Late Fall
and extend your Summer into December
NEW HORIZON will again be operating direct Charier
Flights to Puerto Vallarta from Vancouver, during late October.
November and early December. Now you can enjoy the sun
and sea when the beaches are less crowded, and you can
shop aod sightsee af your leisure — ALL AT SPECIAL LOW
OUT OF SEASON RATES.
Bargain Prices Range from as Little as
$399 to $569 per Person
INCLUDES: • Round Air Trip by PacMie Wastarn Airlinas
• Hotal with Breakfast Dally or Apartmant with Kitchen (no
maals) • Walcoma Flasta Dinner wHh Entertainment • Airport
Tranefere and New Horizone Own Staff to Walcoma You
DEPARTURES: • October 23 • November B, 21 • December 4
new:
ZfKHIZOn holiday in the sun available from
0 Your Local Travel Agent
m
WlUIS TRAVEL SERVICE
385-1533 578 Votes St Victono BC 385-4312
FLY DIREa
from
VICTORIA
STAX DEIJLPr.AXR
G O R O K A , Papua New
Guinea — Today we got on a
time ma<‘hine, an eWerly
DC-3 of Air Niugini. and flew
back to the Stone Age.
The yearly "singsing" is
on: Fierce tribesmen with
bows and arrows, boars' tusks
through their noses. Stone
Age people who peer at you,
under headdresses of tfiw"er-
ing bird plumes, beads, shells
and possum fur.
The "singsing" has lv»en
going on 'iO years and there
are 50.000 people in this coffee
planters’ town of 10.500 in the
New' Guinea highlands. Aus¬
tralia used to run this land
but now* it’s a new nation. One
year old. Three million peo¬
ple: Papua New Guinea.
Wildest looking bunch are
the Mud Men of the Asaro
Valley. Bodies coated in grey
mud. Masks made of clay'.
ENei-ybody Is armed with
hows and arrows and spears
for most of the dancing
honors ancient victories.
The coffee planters (who or¬
ganized the first "singsing")
put a ban on liquor.
“Which is probably a good
thing. Only a few years ago
these chaps were burying the
hatchet - - in each other’s
heads," said an Australian
wbo lives down in Port
Moresby, the captial.
AH the trib«5 are giNtog a
wide berth to the Kukukuku,
the last people to stop eating
their enemies, not too long
ago.
Presently you can only get
to New Guinea via Sydney (on
Quantas) or from Manila.
About 5,900 North Americans
come here eacb year.
Rory Scott — he ran Fiji’s
tourist bureau for years — is
introducing
all-season
I vacation
destination
the tourist director erf the new
nation.
He said: “A lot of Ameri¬
cans come here to see the
place where they soldiered. It
rosl.s them a day. T^n
there’s a big air fare — ahfwt
J140 via Sydney fnHn San
Francisco.
"There’s red tape getting
visas. And we've only got 200
hotel riWhis in Port
Moresby."
The feeling of stepping back
in time: A villager marched
in tfxiay thumping drums,
blowing on flutes that sound
like fc^homs. A Papuan wear¬
ing a foot-long gourd eats a
hot dog as he watches three
skydivers bail out <rf a plane
high over unexplored moun¬
tains.
There are men with
headdresses 10 feet tall. Their
breastplates gleaun like gold.
Women have tattoed faces.
Often are nursing a baby at
one breast and a piglet at the
other.
These highlands people
have deep-set eyes. Sloping
foreheads. Wide noses. Short
muscular bodies. A sort of
"missing link” look.
Papua New Guinea has pre¬
serve "pidgin” as the work¬
ing language. (It’s even print¬
ed Trfwnelically as "Air Niu¬
gini.”) Pidgin is baby-talk
^glish. Quite a few' se-agoing
words show’ the coastal trader
origin.
When Prince Charles came
here a year ago for Indepen¬
dence Day. he was. "Numbah
wan pikanini hilong misis
queen.”
Exciting! . . . spectacular lakes and fjords, glaciers,
and soaring alps, tropical forests and steamy thermal
area with spouting geysers, hot springs, bubbling
mud pools and Diow noies. you a enjoy me tismng,
hunting, skiing, hiking, and miles of sunny beaches as
well as all-year lawn bowls and golf. New Zealand, a
rare mixture of nature’s wonders and Alpine splendor.
Discover New Zealand, it's truly a world in miniature.
If It’s Travel. . . It’s
featfierstone
TUVEL SERVICE LTD.
7S4 YATIB
•TRirr
38M101
COLWOOD
PLAZA
479-9905
101-Ztt MBNZtCf
AT tUiCOB
39M427
The most exdtii^ resevt on the
(^hhean: s.s.Ak’acruz.
Hk Resort ,., Fuily «tabiliz«4i.., Fully urcoadilioued... FleganHy
luinKhed and carpeted inside and out... and the facililies are imposing:
several bars and lounges > nightclub * two dance bands • casino • swimming pool
shopping arcade • 24 hour coffee shop • movie theatre • elevators ...
and dozens of other services, facilities and activities.
Tile Ports of Call ... Montego aay, Jamaica ... Santo Domingo. Dominican
Repubbe . .. San Juan, Puerto Rico ... St. Thomas ... Antigua ...
Martinique ... Barbados . Aruba .. Curasao ... Caracas. Venezuela .. .
Cartagena, Columbia.
Features Include: • return Pacific Western Airlines jetflight from Vancouver.
Edmonton and Calgary • free inflight meals and bar • transfers and baggage
handling • brcnUasI, lunch and dinner daily • aircondilioned cabin with private
facilities • full program of onboard entertainment • optional shore excursions *
Strand staff on hand at all times • departs beginning Dec. 9. 1976.
Tw'o weeks as low as $|
including airfare
765 -
3 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
BURRITT TRAVEL
635 YATES ST.
386-7S74
Sail from VuicouwrOct.4.IMum Air Inchidad.
Head south Oct. 4 for the warm
waters of Mexico. It's your only
chance this year to depart from
Vancouver for a luxurious
14 day Me>dco cruise.
You'll sail aboard the sleek
Sun Princess. After visits to
San Francisco and Los Angeles,
you'll cruise to F\ierto Vallarta
and Manzanillo. Then spend
two full days over the weekend
in exciting Acapulco. Next, on to^
Mazatlan, Cabo San Lucas
and bark to Los Angeles.
From Los Angeles, we’ll
Dm fly you back to Vancouver
on Airilim. Your
coach air ticket is included in
the package. This offer applies
to most stateroom types.
The British registered
Sun Princess was built In the
70*s with all the refinements.
Vast fl(X)r to-ceiling windows.
Spacious lounges. Rne dining.
Exciting entertainment.
And the service is superb.
Call your travel agent now.
9»0/PrtflCMB CniilM, 409Granvlil* S(.
Vancouver. B.C.M5C 1T2. (604) 682 3811.
jttidbrochur«onOMexKo QC«nbbmi70AV JPSo Pteilr
jCdTitobMrvPAiiAniaCsii^ DAi«hluvCaiUKl« OKiiic«8i feiin
I My Travel Agent H
Princess Cruises ■
^^^olllMgio«ln9>KKklo( Jlli AP-974-2^J|
} 1
■x
c*
sinoloniflt^y ic ton a . B.C., Sunday, Aufiusl 22, 1976
Week in Records
Pressure cancelling shows here
Metallurgical coal demand
predicted to increase
; lSX 3F^'*»i P y t
Top 20 in Victoria
This Week
1. Don’t Go Breaking
My He«rt .
f. I'd Really Ix>ve To See
You Tonight .
S. Get Closer.
4. Her In .
5. 'Em In
t. Kiss And Say Goodbye
7. l>(Mi't Stop The Muaic
A. You Should Be Dancin'
9. Rock And Roll Music
10 . 1 Want To Slay With You
11 . Two For The Show
12. laat Child.
IS. Baby, 1 Love Your Way
14. Afternoon Delight.
15. A I.lttte Bit More .
16. You’ll Never Find Another
Love Like Mine _
17. Shake Your Booty
18. Bo>-s Are Back la Town
19. Sprlngtinie Mama .. -
20. Gitmne Ix>ve
Elton John and Klki Dee (1)
England Dan and J. F. (>>ley (5)
Seals and Croft' (3)
John Travolta (4)
Paul MiCartney and Wings (S)
>lanhattans (9)
Bay City R<dleps (it)
. . . . Bee Gees (6)
Beach Boys (7)
(iallagher and L>'te (13)
Trooper (IS)
. Aeroemith (16)
Peter Frampton (8)
Startasd Voc^al Band ( 10 )
.Dr. Hook (19)
(N) denotea new entry onto Top 20.
TiOn Rawls (20)
KG and Sunshine Band (12)
_ _ Thin iJiiy (14)
..Henry Grose (N)
April Wine (N)
Bus plunges,
eight die
VIENNA (Reuter) — At
least eight peoplt^ were
drowned when a bus from Co¬
lo g o e , West Germany,
plunged into the Danube
River west of the Austrian
capital Saturday, police said.
The double<}ecker bus. be¬
lieved to have been carrying
50 passengers, left the narrow
road on the right bank of the
swrift-nowing Danube at Aggs-
bach Dorf, between Melk and
Krems.
Almoat 40 ^ssengers were
reported taken to hospitals,
<me in serious condition.
It was originally feared that
at least 20 persons had been
(browned.
A Ttrrific B«glnnlngl
TO A LIFETIME OF
COMFORT and HAPPINESS
Pura Qooaa Down '
Contfnontal
QUILTS and PILLOWS
the
eMsrdown shop
1726 OeiMlM St. 864-0188
<-3 ACROSS FROM -THS BAV
By. KING LEE
Coloniit aopsrttr
Someone is applying prev
sure from Vancouver to stop
acts coming to Victoria and
the result so far is one can¬
cellation aii^ one "postpone¬
ment."
Jack Morgan. Victoria's
director of recreation and
community service, is tight-
lipped abewt the situation, but
there is a definite feeling that
“the word” has been put out
by 'those in Vancouver who
feel that their shows aren’t
selling out in Vancouver be¬
cause the artists are playing
in Victoria.
It'a felt that the net result
so far is the cancellatkai of
the Ray Charles concert sche¬
duled for the Royal Theatre
on Aug. 28 and the "postpone¬
ment" of the Sept 6 Bach-
man-Tumer Overdrive show
at Memorial Arena.
The suspicion of pressure is
backed by the fact that both
Charies and BTO are playing
Vancouver around the same
time and have not cancelled
or postponed those perform¬
ances.
Mumblings around Victoria
are that this practice of put¬
ting pressure (m artists and
promoters to cancel out of
shows to ensure success in
another area is unethical at
best.
The practice could also
work to the detriment of Van¬
couver if. for instance, pro¬
moters at Seattle's King
County Stadium, the King-
dome, thought an act which
was also slated to play at
Vancouver’s Pacific <3(4iseum
would not sell out because of
the closeness of Vancouver.
Such a move in the Van-
couver-Seattle situation
makes more sense than in a
I \1ctaria-Vancouver conflict.
I How many Victorians
i would, for example, travel to
j Vanc-ouver to see Charles or
i BTO? A hundred — at most,
j 2007
( To deprive Vancouver Is-
! land residents of the chance
i to see top-flight entertainment
I because of a fear of losing
business seems a very unfair
situation.
Let’s hope this type of thing
doesn’t become regular prac¬
tice.
□
Most interesting thing about
the Bay City Rollers* appear¬
ance 'Thursday night at Me¬
morial Arena was that despite
a nxmth-long r^motional
campaign by two youth-
oriented radio stations, in¬
cluding high-energy C^-FUN In
Vancouver, the show did not
sell out.
But those who travelled
with the Scottish group said
the Victoria audience wa.s
among the best in the
VANCOUVER (CP) — A
provincial government report
say» demand for British CVv
lumbia's metallurgical coal Is
likely to continue rising, pri¬
marily in Japan and eastern
Canada, with some local use
developing.
The report — Coal In B.C.,
A Technical Appraisal — says
if the roaj demand forecast .
country, lotting the group sing • by the rorx)rt is to he met,
without screaming accompa- large-scale coal mine develop-
niment. and spreading out m e n t s "must inevitably
when requested to. occur."
Devek^Mnent of the prov^
ince's more than 750 million
tems (rf metalluxrglcal cotTpa-
servea will coat between $2.4
and $3.6 billion with produc¬
tion Increasing to 35 million
tone a year by 1995 trim ttia
present 8.9 million metric tons
a year, says the recently-
released report.
It forecasts that the In¬
crease In production wtxild re¬
quire that the provincial min¬
ing woric force of 1,»0 in¬
crease seven times.
Metallurgical coal Is used
primarily in steelmaking.
The report, prepared by the
department of mines and pe¬
troleum resources has envi¬
ronmental guidelines requir¬
ing that companiee file sub¬
missions on their plans at
four stages ct development.
The metallurgical coal re¬
serves of B.C., located In a
belt along the eastern edge of
the province, ai'e difficult to
mine and the rei)ort says so¬
phisticated technology would
have tu be applieiL
Engagements, Weddings ,
and Anniversaries
WWW
Engagements
RAWCLIFFE-DAVIS
Miss Sheila Ann Raweliffe of
Sidney, B.C. wishes to announce
her engagement to Wayne
Arthur Davis, formerly from
Prince Albert, Saskatchewan,
now residing in Victoria, B.C.
The wedding will take place
Saturday, August 28th, 1976 at
7:30 p.m. at St. Andrew's
Church, Sidney, B.C.
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RUSSELL-LYNCH
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Russell,
Sidney, are pleased to announce,
the forthcoming marriage of
their eldest daughter. Sherry to
Mr. John A. Lynch, son of Mr.
and Mrs. R. Lynch of
Courtenay, B.C.
The wading wIM take place
Saturday, October 30th, 1976 at
7 p.m. in Holy Trinity Anglican
Church, Sidney. Reverend
Robert Sansom oxidating.
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PEPPER-TAYLOR
Mr. and Mrs. John Pepper
KENNEDY - HAMMER WATT - BEALES DAVIS - BEHNSEN
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Watt Mr. and Mrs Don Davis of
take pleasure in announcina the of 1953 Richardson are pleased of Victoria are pleased to an- Duncan are pleased to at>-
forthcoming marriage of their to announce the engagement of nounce^he engagement of their nounce the engagement of their
daughter, Susan Elizabeth to their daughter, Deima Jane to daughter, Barbara Mary, to only daughter, Shirley to Mr
Graham James Taylor, son of Eric Leslie Hammer, son of Mr. Mr. Thomas Robert Beafes, son Gary William Behnsen, the only
E. L. Hammer of Port Alberni. of Mrs. Leonard Beales of Vic- son of Mr and Mrs William
The wedding will take place loria. Behnsen of Duncan.
^ptember 4th, 1976 at 2 p.m. in The wedding will take place The wedding will take place
50 WEST BURNSIDE
OPEN DAILY *709
5124 CORDOVA BAY RD.
Cordova Bay Plaza
OPEN MON.. TUES.. WEDS.. »T. 0 h 0; TNURS.. FM. 0-0: SUN. 11-5
Wa raaarva lha rigm to limit quantitiaa.
Pricaa EffacUv Aug. 22, 23, 24, 25
B.C. GRANULATED _ J|
SUGAR 1 49^
.AW. Z5 QUIT
UMIT ONE WITH 010.00 OIIOEII ON OVEN
F
O
O
D
S
SGHNEIDBIS
MEAT MACAMWI
AND CHEESE lOAF
SAUIMI SAU8A6E CHUNK
raUSH SAUSAOE CHUNK
lb.
89
MEADED
VEAL
CUTLET ih
89 '
ONTARIO
MILD
CHEESE lb
39
Ne. 1 READY TO EAT
HAM
WHOLE OR BHANK
BUTT
.99^
BEEF
SAUSAGES
lb.
89
HARVEST
MARGARINE
3-LI. PACK.
2f
ITALIAN PRUNE PLUMS
12 LBS. TAKE HOME PACK 2.69
son of
Mrs. Rose Taylor and the late
Mr. Archie Taylor.
The wedding will take place
at Emmanuel Baptist Church at
2 p.m. on September 6 th, 1976.
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ZELLENSKEY - BURROWS
George and Irene Zellenskey
of ^1 Magdelln Street, Vic¬
toria, B.C. are pleased to an¬
nounce the engagement of their
eldest daughter, Valentina, to
Mr. Walter G. Burrows, son of
Mr. end Mrs. R. H. Burrows,
Victoria, B.C.
The wedding will take place
Saturday, September 2$th, 1976
at 5 p.m. in St. Patricks Church,
2060 Haultain Street. Father
Jackson officiating
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the Church of Our Lord, Vic¬
toria. Reverend Gleason, of¬
ficiating.
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MACKIE - WINDSOR
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J.
Mackie, 8612 Moxon Terrace,
Sidney, B.C., announce with
pleasure the forthcoming mar¬
riage of fheir daughter, Sa
Jean, -
Saturday, September 4th, Saturday, September 25th, 1976
1976 at 1:30 p.m. in St. Mary's at 5 p.m. In St. Peters Anglican
Anglican Church. Archdeacon Church. Reverend^A. Belt of-
Hywel J. Jones officiating. ficiating.
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MONKHOUSE - LEES g^LL - BIRD
Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon M. Ball,
house, 1M4 Knight Ave., en- 3950 Merleen Place, Victoria,
I /<. /.M.. nre pleated to announce the
forth^lng mart age of their engagement of their daughter,
to Mr. Stephen John daughter, Susan Jane, to Mr. j.net Louita to Mr David
Windsor, only son of Mr. John Shaun Michael Lees, son of Alexander Bird son of Mr and
Brentwood Bay, B.C. Goulet Rd., Mill Bay. Street, Victoria.
The marrlaoe will take place The wedding will take place The* wedding will take place
T, 1976 at 2 p.m. In Saturday, August 28, 1976 at Saturday, September 11th, 1976
4:00 p.m. in Queenswood at St. MartIn-in-the-Fields
Chapel, 2494 Arbutus Road. ChurctL Dbed Avenue at 7*30
father Leo Roberts officiating.
August 21st, 1976 at 2 p.m. in
Central Baptist Church with
Reverend Robert 0. Holmes of¬
ficiating.
CAPITAL
CONRAD-COLEY-DONOHUE
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Conrad, of
1941 Hovey Road, Saanichton,
B.C. art pleased to announce
the forthcoming marriage of
their eldest daughter, Leslie
Carol-Lynn, to Mr. Kelvin
i Robert Loley-Oonohue, eldest
1 son of Mr. and Mrs. R. W.
{ Coley-Donohue of 4985 West
Saanich Road, Victoria, B.C.
The wedding will take place
I Saturday, September the 4th,
1976, In Metropolitan United
Church Chapel. Rev. A. Calder
officiating.
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COOL-MASTERTON
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Cool, 2931
Colquitz Avenue, Victoria, are
pleased to announce the
forthcoming marriage of their
only daughter, Beverley Marie,
to Mr. George Erne
Masterton,
Masterton and the late Mr
George Masterton, of 1010 Dun-
smuir Street. Victoria.
The wedding will take place
Friday, September I7th at 7
p.m. in St. Andrews
Presbyterian Church. Rev.
Malloy officiating. .
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EDMONDSON - RUSSELL
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart
Edmondson, 2656 Belmont
Avenue, Victoria, are pleased to
^ u - announce the engagement of
George Ernest their eldest daughter, Judy
son of Mrs. George Louise to Terrence Allen Rus¬
sell, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Russell, 735 Chesterlea
Road, Victoria.
The wedding will take piece
Saturday, September 4th, 1976
at 7 p.m. in St. Michael's end Ail
Angel's Church. Reverend W. J.
Hill officiating.
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MICHAUX - MCKENZIE
Mr. and Mrs. Gaston J.
Michaux, 3260 Woodburn
Avenue take pleasure in an¬
nouncing the forthcoming mar¬
riage of their daughter, Susan
Dorothy to Mr. Ross Hugh
McKenzie, son of Mr. end Mrs.
Hugh McKenzie, 2400 Dunlevy
Street, Victoria.
The wedding will take place
Saturday, September 18th, 1976
at 5 p.m. in Metropolitan United
Church, Dr. A. E. King of¬
ficiating.
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fr<
Reverend Williams of-
iciating.
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Weddings
PARUP - BAILEY
Dn Saturday, July 17th, 1976, the British Embassy Church,
Stockholm, Sweden, was the scene of the wedding between
Heather Jane Bailey, only daughter of Or. and Mrs. Norman L.
Bailey, Victoria, B.C., and Mats Stefan Parup, eldest son of Mr.
and Mrs. Sten Parup. Goteborg, Sweden. The Reverend D.
Strangeways officiate at the ceremony.
The bTide given in marriage by her father, chose an elegant^
gown of pure silk chiffon and chiffon draped picture hat. She
carried a classic bouquet of white roses and was attended by her
sister-in-law, Mrs. Darlene Bailey of Vancouver, as nrtatron of
honor and Gaii Stirling and Sarah Angus of Victoria were
bridesmaids. They were attired in silvery blue silk jersey gowns
with wreaths of blue and white cornflowers in their hair. They
carried bouquets of cornflowers and white sweetheart roses.
Haaken Parup, brother of the groom was best man and the
ushers were Nigel and Roger Bailey, brothers of the bride. Mile
Laurence Chatry attended the guest book.
Following a reception end dance, the bride! pelr left on e
motor tour of Europe.
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MACAULEY - KINGHORN
St. John's Anglican Church in
Victoria, was the scene of a dou¬
ble ring ceremony on Saturday.
July 17th, 1976 when Sharon
Louise, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jernes Kinghorn became
the bride of Ronald Grant
Macauiey, spn of Mr. end Mrs.
Jack Macauiey of Port Alberni.
Reverend David McKay of Port
Alberni officiated.
The bride, given in marriage
by her father was radiant in a
floor-length gown of Peeu De
Chrome with a floral collar end
matching lace-edged veil. She
carried a bouquet of red roses,
white carnations and baby's
breath.
The maid of honor, Wendy
Glew, wore a flerel gown of soft
blue end Marlon Macaulay,
sister of the groom end Keren
Leeson, the bridesmaids, wore
identical yellow floral gowns.
Mr. Daryl Brown was best man
and Gian AAacauley, brother of
the groom and Russell
Kinghorn, brother of the bride
were ushers.
The reception was held In the
garden at the bride's parents'
home Where the toast to the
bride was given by her uncle,
Mr. Keith Duncan.
Following the wedding, the
bride and groom left for the
East to see the Dlymptes.
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BETTS-GORDON
With Dr. King officiating at
Metropolitan (fhurch, Meria
Muriel Louise Gordon ex¬
changed vows with (Gordon
George Betts in a double ring
ceremony; given in marriage
by her parents and attended by
Sharon Campbell and Susan
Betts. Ron Betts acted as best
man, ushers were Laurie
Campbell and Jim Betts.
The happy couple left the
church in bright sunshine
through showers of confetti as
the lovely bells chimed "The
Bells of St. Mary's".
Reception followed at Juan de
Fuce Sports Centre to relatives
and friends. The newlyweds will
make their home In Victoria
where both ere employed.
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BIGGS-TOMLIN
Mr. end Mrs. Howard Tomlin,
Victoria, B.C., take pleasure in
announcing the marriage of
their daughter, Marne
Elizabeth to George Ernest, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Biggs,
Parksville, B.C.
After 8 quiet wedding on Fri¬
day, August 20th, 1976, a family
dinner was en)oyed at the Dak
Bay Beech Hotel.
The happy couple are now on
e honeymoon sailing around the
Gulf islands.
^ W W
CROMPVOETS - WALKER
A beautiful double-ring
ceremony was solemnized on
August 7th, 1976 in Queen's
Avenue Apostolic Church when
Catherine Lynn, only daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. J. Walker was
united in marriage with Mr.
Baptist R. Crompvoets, son of
Mr. and Mrs. A. Crompvoets of
Almelo, Holland. Reverend
Haraid Bredesen officiating.
The bride, given in marriage
by her father, was radiant In a
original gown of silk organza
and imported Chantilly lace,
featuring an Empire waist,
scoop neckline, e lace bodice
and appllqued skirt. Pleated
organza ruching encircled her
wrists end the hemline of her
gown and carried on into the full
cathedral train. A three-tier
original veil misted down from
a dainty floral headpiece. Her
only iewelry was a pearl
necKlace with matching ear¬
rings, the gift of the groom end
she carried a beautiful bouquet
of cascading red roses,
stephanotis end feather pink
carnations.
The Maid of Honor, Miss
Karen . Pugh end the
bridesmaids, Lise Donohue and
Karen Andersen, wore identical
gowns in pink end carried
Colonial bouquets of roses and
pink cernetions. The best man.
Bob Robinson and the atten¬
dants, Harley Abram and Ivan
Wright wore light blue tuxedos
with pink carnation
boutonieres. John Vickers Jr.
and Barry Walker, the bride's
brother, .acted as ushers.
Following a reception at the
Oak Bay Beach Hotel, the hap¬
py couple left for a honeymoon
in Haweii, the bride travelling
in a pink and beige two-piece
dress with beige accessories
and a pink orchid corsage.
The newlyweds will make
their home in Victoria.
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REID-LITT
Mr. end Mrs. Richard Lift are
happy to announce the mar¬
riage on July 10th, 1976k of th|)ir
daughter, Bryony Vivian
Burnell Lift to David Robert
Reid, younger son of Mr. end
Mrs. Reginald Reid of Victoria.
The bride was given in mar¬
riage by her father at the double
ring Mremony at St. Mail's
Anglican Church, Dak Bay. i he
Rev. D. E. Mouiden officiating,
and. this was followed by a
reception at the Uplands Golf
Club. The bride was attended by
maid of honour, Catherine
Clark, and bridesmaid, Sally
Yonge, and the groom by best
man, William (Max) Bircn. Tha
young couple's relatives and
many friends were ushered to
their seats by David Lift,
brother of the bride, and Clif¬
ford Reid, brother of the groom.
Life-long friend of the bride,
Russell Dawkins, proposed the
toast to the bride.
HOLMES-JARVIS
On e lovely summer
afternoon, July 24th, 1976,
Reverend Franck Patterson un¬
ited in marriage at the Cadboro
Bay United Church, Susan
Joanne Jarvis, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Cyril Jarvis, 4010
Whiterock Street, and Thomas
Wesley Holmes, 2141 Crescent
Road, all of Victoria.
The bride, given in marriage
by her father, was escorted
down the aisle to the music of
"Purcell's Trumpet" played by
Anthony Henorlks on the
trumpet.
Susan was radiant in a tong
flowing gown of white matte
jersey, featuring a scalloped
neckline trimmed with seed
pearls which also outlined her
double illusion net held in place
by a floral bandeau of white
carnation tips. She carried a
bouquet of yellow roses end ba¬
by's breath.
Maid of honor was Miss
Andrea Hendriks, end
bridesmaids were Mrs
Caroline Bartlett, end Susan's
sisters, Dele and Deborah
Jarvis. The attendants were at¬
tired similarly In white and yel¬
low organza gowns and carried
bouquets of yellow and white
daisies, with matching flowers
in their heir. Best man was
Jamie Henderson, end ushers
were the groom's brother,
David Fitzpatrick and Paul
Jarvis.
Cyril and Greta Jarvis and
Ann and Albert Holmes greeted
guests at a reception held in the
commons block. University of
Victoria. Mr. George Guinness
long-time friend of Susan and
her family, proposed the toast
to the bride. Denny's Canned
Music provided the background
music for the reception. The
three-tiered wedding cake was
made by the bride's mother end
decorated by "Brodies" in a
white flower-basket design
trimmed with yellow roses.
Before departing for a honey¬
moon in Hawaii, Susan and Tom
were presented with floral lets
by Tom's sister Heather, after
which the young couple passed
through a friendship arch,
formed by the wedding guests,
to the music of "We've only lust
begun." Guests from out-of-
town Included family ^and
friends from Dntarlo, Dragon,
Saskatchewan end various
points In British Columbia.
Dn their return from Hawaii,
the Holmes's will take up
residence in Campbell River
where Tom teaches school.
CROZIER-MBLDBR
Reverend Harold Pendrey
officiated at e double ring
ceremony in North Douglas
Pentecostal Tabernacle on July
17, 1976 at 1:30, when Maple
Gail, younger daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lloyd Melder, became
the bride of Michael Joseph, son
of Mr. Robert Crozier end the
late Mrs. Crozier. Ron Zahar
sang as the bride was given
away by her father and Aloha
Carbol sang as the register was
signed, both accompanied at
the organ by Mrs. June Yeats.
The bride wore a white floor-
length gown featuring a bodice
and frontal panel of Chantilly
lace, enhanc^ with tiny pearls.
A floor-length train and long
veil also trimmed with lace
completed her bridal outfit. She
carried red roses dotted with
babies breath. The maid of
honor, Carolyn Hawkins, and
other bridesmaids. Coral
Melder, Susan Yeats, and
Nikola Franke wore Identical
dresses of crepe with embossed
flowers with backgrounds of
green, peach, blue and yellow.
They all carried yellow daisies,
and wore babies breath in their
hair.
The groom wore a white Gats-
by suit and was attended by
best man. Les Sainsbury and
ushers, Terry Jarvie, Eric
Larsen end Ron Welts. The
Ring Bearer was Andy
Woolford.
The toast to the couple wet
f liven by Jack Woolford end foi-
owing a reception at the
Empress Hotel, Mr. end Mrs.
Crozier left on a honeymoon to a
chalet at Moraine Lake In the
Alberta Rockies. The couple
will reside in Victoria.
WWW
WWW
R«t«t for putMicoflon of WoMIng,
EnQogomontt and Annivoraory
neticM with or without pteturok
•voiloWo on roqutat from ttio A«vor-
tiung Doportmtnt. (Spocloi forim to
•atist you In writing copy alae
•vailoblo) Copy for woohtnd Mitlona
ahould bo In tho Vlctorlo Rroas offict
no lofor than S p.in. tha Wadnaadoy
prior to publlcatien dato-
eusiNiss oeeici oeiN
• a.iM. fa ttW p.111., iMaaeay la Prtday
(Ciaaae Satareay aatf Saneoy)
Anniversary
REID50TH
Mr. end Mrs. Kenneth Reid,
2270 Harlow Drive, will
celebrate their golden wedding
anniversary on September 1st
They were married September
1st, 1926 at 1114 Fairfield Road
by the Reverend Doctor Sip-
preli.
Mr. and Mrs. Reid will
welcome friends end relatives
at tha horn# of their son and
daughtar-ln-law, 1937 Appleton
Place on Sunday, August 29th
from 2:00-4:00 p.m.
WWW
386-2121
Monday throaxh Satwday
t a.m. to • p.m*
ails Mirnisl
Daily iCeloniet Victona, B.C., Sunday, August 22, 1976 jy
Vancouver Uland^e Largest Shopping Centre in Print
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
BURNS — L<nd« Mid Jsmts
CD«rk>lt» North Corotina
daoflhter Kristin Brittainy June
COMING EVENTS
and MEETINGS
michaai reside in Victoria.
Great-Oreat-GVoat Aunt ^ i - *
imh Mf^ia Mayfti Anfi UvIm ^MCm Non-status Indians* Lanoford Le.* *
and urtcie Maiai arw. (wyiaa tar- StaUon Atondav. 7:30
D.m. Early Bird Ganves start at 7.
NO GAMES LESS |
THAN $25
14 cards S9. Extra cards 25c. Ev-
ijQf^.eryona welcom.
GALBRAITH — Born to Jim and
Sharon (nee Keller), Delta, B.C.,
a son. Christian James, 10 lbs. 7
oz.. at Burnaby Hospital.
HEIJ» WANTED 21
GENERAL
Program Director I
VIC WEST
COMMUNITY Y ,
SALARY RANGE $IO.]«4IS.SIO
Person reauired to establish, da*
veioo and operate a wide range of
programs Involvlno the community
at all levels in a new recreation
HELP WANTED
GENERAL
British Columbia
Forest Products
Limited
HELP WANTED
GENERAL
NORTH COWICHAN
AQUANNIS
CENTRE
121 HELP WANTED
• general
Waitr’ess-waiters need
full time. Apply >4 dally.
Jenson Streat._
:2S SKHaLED TRADES l26
‘ Beautiful and Remote i
I QUEEN CHARLOTTE '
ISLANDS
OFUt K HKU*
KORMAN — Daniel Karl. ..
A-'just 5th to Ted and Pat, a’ BOILER /lAAKERS PICNIC, (*cmtv'
brother for Dennis and Gina, local 191. 11-6 Saturday. August
Sincere thanks to Ors. Horton 2lsl. At Centenniel Park on Wal- Responsibilities Include: Recrult-
and Gough# and Jubilee A 6 ater> lace Drive. I ment. training and supervision of
nity staff. - ---Ivolunteer leaders end support
- 20 ■ LOST Olid FOUND 1 staff: cooperation with Vic West
KUHN — Born to Joe and C'ndyi_ - --- Community Association and axist-
(nee Akehurst) a boy, Josef Maxi LO S T ; REWARD. SPAYED ihfl„ Cvmmunitv programs and has,immedlate opening for
William, 0 lbs. 4 ois., on August white femele cel. part Stamesa, ?•••*•
18, 1974. Thanks to Dr. Kardera, Winchester Road, Ml. Douglas implementation of prooram.
Dr. Gough and malemlty staff Park, about first August. Nervous. .kruirf new* » dear** in
at R.J.H. Special thanks to rot good oalured. Owners, return
hubby for all Ws patience! from abroad, distressed. Any earn*
-r-Z- . RH . !«'■ advertiser of white cat found experience In ^'V^HAfORK or
LOWE — Born ^fo Dan and i please cortact 4^-8177. similar held.
REWARD FOR jNFORMA- Aoollcaflon and resume IN WRIT
Or. B)iiuna*A4eyer and matern- tie white and gold Pemeranian. jg Gei,rge Aiiiston. YM-YW
ity sleH at Royak joWlae Hos- Black eyes and now. 11 yrs. old. coortnev. VIW 1C4.
Ditai Wandered from Cadboro Bay area i . .
^ _ July 11. Call anytime 47^2447 or
MARSHALL — Born to Or. and 458-8494. _1 EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
“ ■■ Marshall.
IlME KEEPER-
OFFICE
ASSISTANT
V lOM 10 Head-Lambrick Park area. Victoria Native Indian Friendship
’ iinivar^tv” Hilalfh Centre. for their office loeated at Caycuse
whiskers, brown collar. 477-3524. ... Camp on Cowichan Lake. Appll-
centre, Hamilton, omario. —ria— iTm — rpnwN .*.®**** *r**^2!?** c»nH should be currently enrolled
BLA^K LAB FULL GROWN , Adminlstralion, Personnel, and I_ •itKar C G A or -ff l A asurtm*
hi* hu h rmr Aft lUlAfr-hfh ' —/-aa«.a '■! •’'her C.W.M. _Or K.J.M. (XTUrseS
PATRICK — Born to Ron and Lori rnaia was hit bv a car on Mefeho-
(net Komelson) In Calgary on sin near Wishart owner please call i
Augirt I7th^ 1974 at 2:24 a.m. a | Belmont Langford Vet Hosrttal. j
Stiw LCisT:~SA^LL ..>eMALE TOR
-. - - olther C.G.A. or^R.I.A. courses'
Jit—studies and will preferabiv have
end Centre orogremmes. to . - ■ -
carry out decisions
BvOrd of Directors.
completed the first year of the pro-
^7 gram. This is a permanent full’
fima position offering a competl-'
and June Kernels^ of Cateary tolse cj* wljh QUALIFICATIONS — Experience excellent
and Ai' Patrick of Lake Cow- and broken tall. 382-OBM or
477-5654, after 4:00 p.m. _
SMITH - La;;^?^Gr.ham an-' L oJ^”bwvi^
nounce the arrivel of their babv i
•sister. Carolyn Jean, 7 lbs. on i
August 4. 1974. Proud Parents, - _
Bn*ce and Nina (nee Bullhckxl; lqsT: FRIDAY; SMALL, BLACK.
... Friendship Centres
native crganizatlons • .
edge of Indian Culture and lan¬
guage preferred.
Starting salary, 5975 par month.
Application deadline Sept. 3. 1974.
?,{?;? fringe benefits.
knlwui Caycuse is located on the,
knowi- ^ Cowichen Lake, 15
miles from the Village of Lake
Cowichan. Housing Is available in
camp for marrM employees or
ADVERTISEMENTS IN
THIS CU\SlFi:’A'l lO.N
ML ST CO.MPLY W ITH
THE
BIUTISH CX)LU.MBIA
IIL.MA.N lUGHi'S ACI
’ CAPITAL RTOIONAL “
DISTRICT
i^uires a
SECRETARY U
{of the
JUAN DE FUCA
RECREATION CENTRE
SALARY: M99-975 par /honth plus
(^aiiricatlons— bronze cross (na- CJLA
tiOTMl lifMuardino preferred) and lo perform a variety of secretar-
water safety instructor with con- ]ei duties associated with the
sidereble aouetic working axperl- daily operation of the Juan de
once. Fuca Kecreaiion Centre. Duties,
. A will Include tne recording and
hi transcribing of committees min-
ao 2 n 7 ?i*iAifr^ exoerleoce in vour supervision of clerical
applications. ^ geoaral otflcf as¬
signments. The successful appli-
> AdmlnUtraf^! cont will also ba responsiMa for
AominisTraior. efficicant oparatlsn if the ad¬
ministration office Including the
'Maintenance of records relating to
ice rentals, event gchedulet, am-
.fiovtc working nours. and otner
related statistical and fiscal re-
' fWtS.
Applicants should hava high school
iGuaxon or egulvaleni eo..i.a-
PART TLMB or
TF.MFORARY HELP'
'i\J)VERTlSEMENTS IN
THIS CLASIFICATTON
MUST COMPLY WITH
THE
BRITISH COLUMBIA
HL'.VIAN RIGHTS ACT
|M
BUSiNENS SERVICES
and DIRECTORY
Carpenters
i Aquatic Attendant :
iTo perform llfeouardino. Instruct¬
ing. and routine pool maintenince
Suafifications — bronze cross end
water safety Instr^or.
Senior Aquatic |
I Attendant |
To assist in orogdam leadvshio'
and perform lifeguardlng.'' Instruct-
ino, and routina pool maintenanct
dutlas.
For renovations and raetoratlons
. __ _ At a prici you can afford.
. the , (THE CRATOIASTER
Vtlop preventiv# and lheraptotlC| BRITISH COLUMBIA WAY)
■ pfogrsmmas In the AAasset area. I .......v- oTr'urc
Opportunity to work with a team HL.VIAN RIGHTS ACT FEATURING.
cf i^ith and sMial «rvlcet o.-t^tTUb— iTaoTov—TTTTT, —Rsplacement alum, windows
tetslonals In an Innovative protect. PART-TIME library ^SSIS-i
Position: 4 days per week, saGify, t»nt tor Horary, wide windows.
based on M.SA. i lyiowiedge of Ilfcranr routine essen -1 ^rtd suodeek additions.
Apply to: Mrs. V. SexSmlth. itlal, medical termlnoiogv an asset. !I!concrete work.
Health and Human Rasourcas 22W hours par —Alterations.
. Centre, Bex 419, Masset, B.C. hour. Suitable awHcants wi Pe _pjjnfjr,Q;
EXPERIENCED ^ BACKHOE OP- care helpful. Top commissions. I?X)R FREE ESTLMATE
e-fitof wented. Must be a‘?le to quality product, Mr, Clerk. mirwvL-' oe/'oai'j
meet the public. Phone 452-2331, 595-5284. PHONE 38G-9313
YM-”yWCA requires SHOIU STArRSr~G'REENHdu5ES7'5UN.
^ G.L E R , or^AT cook Saturdivs only, 10 :j0i decks, cirports. fences built or
a.m. to 2::g D.m. A^ltcatlons in rapaired, guaranteed. Free es-
writlng only before August 25. YM-itimetes. 10% discount on labor for
YWCA CoHee Shop, liO Courtney, pensioners on reguest. Evenings.
V8W1C4.__ _.please cell Ron 479-7438 or lin
MAINTENANCE PBRSC^ FOR’ 4 -
VYCT O'R lA' NAT^E InDIAN W
FRIENDSHIP CENTRE. 1298 Lnke Cow-
J. N. Berlkoff,
Administrator.
District » Ncrth Ccwicltan,
P. 0. Box 278.
Duncan, B.C.
_ V9L 3X4 _
CANADIAN
PACIFIC
HOTEL
days_382-233L nights 38 3-5867 ._
1 8AIJ!:S PERSONS
uiid AGENTS
~A'ERT!SENaL\TS LN
THIS a^\SIHCATION
MUST CmiPLY WITH
THE
COLUMBIA
Hl'M.'N RIGHTS ACT
SALES
PERSON
hours per day, 7 a.m.-ll a.m.,
Mondev-Prtdey. Must be bondabie.
' state age and experlenca. Apply
I Victoria Prow Bex 142.
DAYCARE NEEDED FOR
month old boy, between Metchosin;.'*2^' • IV
'and city. Thursday, Friday endl_
. Saturday, from 9-4. 478-6564. I VICTORIA
FINISHING CARPENTRY
|14 par hour, 21 years experienca.
Exiusive winding stairways and
the more soohlsiicated craftman-
iship a specialty. Cartlflad lourney-
man. 652-2431 before 8 a.m. and
.. 'Gordon Head Sent
Phone tn-ton, evenings.
. . _ . .. CEDAR CRAFT.
T^eo'Framing and General Contractor.
after dasigns our speclelitv. We
else heve a design service eveil-
labli. All work guaranteed.
38M401.
area.
SALES CLERK TO WORK ai OPRAAA CONSTRUCTION
g'a:.ua>ion or cquivaieiu rm-vci- ... ^ tradesmen at reasonable
flonal standing or supplemented by Highly rewarding PMltl<m a ^Ply Liiliam West Bakery, 773.alterations,
-courses m typing (minimum 65 ‘^rson to sen new end osad homes Fort. _ icaraorts. sund^s, framing.
5^^'lfk« thlldi5?ffbl^bt
Smith. Many thanks to Dr. iqsther folder with credit CM-ds. Gladstone Avenue. Victoria, B.C.
..Conway and >j*ar Fort and Douglas. Reward. 384-3212 or 384-4642.
Chew. Jagdis. and Conway and port "and Douglas.
Mate-mlty s*eff at Victoria Gen- $ 93 . 7194 .
eral HoSPltaL_ ;LOST~i~2-PIECE~G’RA'7^’uTf~ON
WERELEY — Born to Coost^le Hilis|d^,of ,Qo«Ra^ needed.
WtKfcLfcT — oorn 10 i.on 5 iwiB ninsioe or \ 4 uai 7 a, m
and Mrs. 6 . Wereley (nee Ran-< ward. 595-1424. 384-2560.
RENTAL TRAINEE
Reliable lob trainee for progres¬
sive rental operation, must nave
dall) their first born — a son —|, Act— cirDBrern-apcAlowr ^ capable of
Isn Randall. 5 lbs. 13 ozs., on-LOST. FAIRFIELD AREA, l^G working with minimum supervision
A'loust 14,. 1974. at Prince ^ H) Outfy. g^d be responsible. Starting pay
Georoe Regional Hospital. A Phone 595-4040 or 383-6270._ _ low, advancement with propor-
" ‘ "rwirrt" niiOMFkF cat Honete pay, rapid futura excellent.
LOST.^ CHICO _BURM_fc5t CAl, ^*r*W-h D*n*«t« IM IfW^r.
Ictien. Facilities in camp include an- Qiatoaux L^Jee Ixxiise
elementary senool (to Grade 6 ) mauirek
and a general store. Full facilities ,, . .
are avaiiauie In Lake cowKnan. Head m^ht auditor, Ao-nram*
Applications should ba addreesad audit clerks. Salary negotia- meet end
.. . . . _ ..... ISA njif-l.r
refer-
with uln uwUnci pr4<rably In K.,’,;! —
JSS 1551' bvx bs,. 5»-b«.
clerical, axperience eomoinea wn resume. All replies In strict pupTJ.NG
f-Mflften,-* Anniu X/rt-tAfla PrMa. CVfcNINO
atiliity to S.pervi
Randal V?ctoHa ^ Mr*and nw* tenVermlal P^k Apply'Saariich'Rehtats Ltd. Inter^
r...®,'' - -- '^-•j 5 *^^*"’*Reward. &-aM o"'^- Call
Mr^.’ S. Wereley. Cornwall, On
tarlo.
LOST: LANGFORD,
*•_ 477-5112, 7:30-5:00 P.i
5-MONTH
DEATH and
FUNERAL
ANNOUNCEMENTS
DIRECTLY
FOLLOWING
CLASSIFIED
throat. 476-6959. pewerd.
LOST; ONE WHITE FIBREGLASS
saddle bag lid. Reward. 642-5400.
evenings; days, 642-3912.
LOST: A 6 ALE CAT. TWO^EArT-
old. tabby and wntte. Vic West
area. 386-0644.
FOUND; MARMALADE A4ALE
cat, 5 months, white flea collar.
Near sea, Esquimalt. 365-7992.
,LOST: READING AND SUN-
n A\-Nni-N(-,-MlJ\TS potten, R.w.ta. 477.31J1.
It A.NNOl.N<l-.Mt->l» ORANGE
INDEPENDENT SCHOOL IN
Vancouver, requires staff for Sep-
M. W. Mergene
Industrial Relations Supervisor
British Columbia Forast Prod¬
ucts Ltd.
Caycusa Camp
Honevoon Bay, B.C.
VOR 1Y0
CORPORATION OF THE
TOWNSHIP OF ESOUIMALT
Parks and Reaealion
Des>^ment
ERSATILE. HOME MAIN-
_talner. carpentry, renovaflons-
- --.j- ... - ►v,-mri«. HFLP REQUIRED caWnets. painting, papering. Ouaii-
nieht niimter of cierlc'eT staff. Apply vrctorla Press, expereincad P«h»oi, Sc Reasonable. *'*•'*'
Applicants must have ; n ability to preferred. Apply 17 Mile House, 38.-3 090.
meet and dual harmonloosly with - . . r-riiCM .Sooke Rd. or 642-S718. --
i.he puchc end community grou:M oALtOiVttlN I
Adam,
ble. Room and board avail- TO”
aUe.
AND AGENTS
ess CfS«on housT fJh^? required to assign
West 4 Ut®*Aw«*V*r»^^ 5 S 2 r' co-ordlnatloQ of programs in
B'c v^4pi * ^ an out^ pool. Under the general
_ supervision of the Aquatic Pro-
GREATER VICTORIA re-
ASSOCIATION ** involved In. co-or-
:rS™a-rts« ™ “ “■
mentally handicapped adults in a ... .
residential settlna# Contact pre- (ifY* •
Please apply to:
The Controller,
Chateaux Lake Louise.
Lake Louise, Alberta,
TOLrOFO.
SUPTORT YOUR LOCAL
POLICE)
AND YOUR COMMUNITY
BY JOINING THE
• RESERVE POUCE
FORCE”
^n« of the largest and bSt known
CUSTOM HOUSE FRAMING, AD-
NIGHT WATCH PERSON 3' dfliohs, r^lw. Free estimetes.
nights a week hours 11 p.m. to 7| 3834)643.__
city .motel. Reply Victoria RENOVATIONS. ADDITIONS.
rec. rooms, sundeck, carport, etc.
LADY TO BABYSIT Call 382-3578.
' >h>i-»f-t*r ■ r»t*r*fWM ' "* ’i'® lafoott and bast known .. -
o" Vancouvar Island for our WANTED: _ _
yI '^*caoitl olflct In Duncan — Semi private large house and 2 small dogs oc- carpentry SERVICE HOME
Re^oaS^DiSri* ?o' DrawS "•*; 'f- caslonallv. E^llenl rfafenct SJSS.jilSii. oia Wil. RtaKin-
Wdwli; B C. ni irtr .than _abla. Jock Stawart. SWTM.
12 noon Tuesday, August 315^97^ matein Canada. Write tc Jehn ' BABYSITTER HOUSEKEEPER, QUALITY FRAMING,
- ‘ paji.11'7'0' Central Saanich area. ^ ^ y ^ f | ^ f) ^ ^ ^ree estimates.
SERVICE
required.
■representative Sutl^rland Nanaimo Re^ CDun-
dutiei Includa cash can) Ltd j^t^k Road. Duncan 4M.M7j^
trans^fon plus related otllce B. C. or P hone 7464177. _
duties, most be able to deol with / salespersons
the pu^ a range^ tom- ^ Sirbi tto » 5 ^ Impor- -
pony benefits i^- responded, to iAi
654-1897, 5954156.
PART-TIME SOAP SALESMAN. ^OME RENOVATIONS, ADOl-
4784737. -tlAns and framina. Phone Ron
--- after 5:30. 477-9354.
SliL'A.lU.>> **ANTED
HIGH
CHRIS WOOTTON PREVIOUSLY
at the Cutting Bench has lust re-
turned and Is now at Mr. B'z In LOST IN
Nootka Court 385-^21.
strips kitten. Colwood area, cm^ ^
fTB.tfno “Wl Of.
— oram fiir*rtnr *♦ Jg-ji yeoTS doualic exoeriaoca m txith m Qualiticatioos: Canadian cnizen. wnnus pieeae u**'
ORANGE •' “•■“'i- j-.-.
K-.., benefits tmnt tw •*•»» W*W I»*i»wnuwj, to
*« o««»’ parson ^ ^
Coast Savings. Barbera West. 239 j), hianest ommissions end bon- .QUIET. -- -, . --«,,,
AAenzIes St. _ In the Industry. Up to 20% re- seek caretaker positiM. term or carpentry. SIS-SllS
IS NOW LOOK- newais and qualified contacts estate. We are healthy, •C'Jve,' - ,c_. jiiv YppcTai tv
• Ntlers. We ^Hv- We want you to spend most noh-drinkers or ^ smokers.^
_ _ y compre- of your time doing what you do own go^ car. A4an handy and Howie— — j _
be aeoeotina''ap’- l^lve'’"benefitv end opportunity Imt. selling, and be w«ll peW for m^hankal. No ramuoera^n;t>Rgg FRAMING CREW AVAIL-
I ions a valuable In forfufure advancement. Ifyou are »■ W«.^»ve mop'* JJf . ami :*tl9- P*wie 754-2822 Nanaimo,
lions avaiweie in discussing a career Places to For confidential In- manent home. Excellent locel ref-'-- -
BANK OF B.C. .
Ing for experienced
excellent salary,
_ QUALITY. LOW COST.
RETIRED COUPLE iguaranfeed, framing and general
oleaaa call Mr Hendarson tervlew. cfll Nell Clark. Mutal of ereoces. Reply Victoria Prass, Box i FRAMING .^D
piteae C«ll W. rronwi^wi rtnR»K* Uf. *(J rCMB,* >VA iJkKiB X 7 e.S 4
104-<24 154.
guBiities. aspeciatiy in
employae relations
< tsplishing priorities,
current Royal '
Cross and Red
) area of
Suwessfol candldatas’will undergo mediately^a ^tmW ^w’^'w^loeni
an •xtanxIviB tralnina Mrlod after .• fr.*
.. FINISHING
^crews available. 4794640.
.5 tOMINfi FVR.NTS
and MEETINGS
ATHLETIC'CLUB
BINGO
Wednesday
Victoria Curling
Club, 7 p.m.
$2,600
IN PRIZES
10 GAMES
$50
OR MORE
6 GAMES
$100
OR MORE
JACKPOT
$525
SUPPORT
Amateur Sports
DOWNTOWN RATON'S! . tsWiNiing pVioriMes. Must iMv* ‘’—'.* 1 '' dc^'oment" o'i:#"vMrs oHic# exp,-' CASTLE
jrcs;! ^ properties ltd.
LoIt .."p^O APOL. 'c^l!i“ro«Er -excel'in,,
lo, full size man's Wke. near Lans- kitchM ar^ Usual municipal frltwe benefits. cVlon, commission solit up tO'H*’'* N-ansportatlw. Reply to
downe Junior high. 599 46». atmosphere is Salary range S890-9»475-14)a4-l,075 ^ fwH fringe benefits. Drop on Victoria Praea. Box 113._
..- -- •®®*>^ • require. Must ^ in at 2541 Empire Street ^ lor ruT^i^n'e^^,^tTU -
HUSBAND AND WIPE TEAM. FINISHtWG CARPENTER AVAIL-
Inew arrivals from Manitoba desire able. Phone ^-0289.
part or toM-time employmant. ...oBBWTDvr'AYirr'^c'
iCiaaning, caretaking and-gr man- S^LL CAR^NTRY and RE-
I aging home, apartment, niotet oriPOfr lobe, labor only. 477-74 M.
'commercial buildings. Vast expert-
month.
fun. so let's talk turkey — er, uh,
LOST: AUGUST 14TH, ORANGE chili, or grinder ... Phone
male long-haired cat In Sidney. 479-7014.
Rew»;U_6S6-6552.__- SWtM~COACH RE- until i « m « wi'
LOST 4 MONTH OLD KITTEN, qulred for competitive swim club p w *'
p^Nr" PVRrjrAs'”'poRT
k.“vrs.cT’IS»''l£lJw:"v'iSj
or call 479-7123.
Applicatlont IN WRITING will
rKeived^ by _tt^ imdersigned
Manager,
127 Fraser Street,
Victoria. B.C. V9A 6
M IIEf.P WANTED
(.f'NERAh
•VKIITISICMKNTS IN
•IMI-' CL.NSIFIC.VnOX
MUST COMPLY WITH
THE
EUmSH COLUMBIA
Tf"TTA\ PIG^rr^ ACT
Iv cash flow on compeer system. i s'tarke, ^ 4 iiU or 4 ^- 3 &
Preparation of flnencMil state--—---— - -
mrnts and payroll for three lepa- Victoria Dodge Chrysler
rate operations. S1200. 3864754. ^ ^
hands, and nice fenced In yard. I {
. would like to have vour children
, from 2 yeors • S veers of .ege. 1
I while you work. Phone 382-2591.
WANTED PART AND FULL
time personnel to service and se '>
Electrolux products from new Sid¬
ney office. No ex 4 rtence n^cev
sary. Will be trained. Most have
t? 'porntlr- c-^ personal inter¬
view call 656-7248.
I ASSISTANT CUSTOD1An“ RE-
oulrad esrty in September for
First United Church, 932 Befmorei
' Road, Victoria. Mainly evening
Apply to Church oMke,
BOYS OR
KAN I . I ime A,.AUU|.|,NU i" ^’ENGLISHMAN, MABRi'eO, AGED i
cuA, dunes t! liKludi, invoicing P«rtment. We are looking 37 , » veefs enol^rlng exwl-■
:"nd“;«iS‘r;"r5t dffi:, p'™" “ :
Heurs fiexitte. Experienced per- in thn automotive field. Cbn-
Carpeta and tinoipum
FLOOR CDVERING
CARPCT-ARMSTRONG
VINYL
WE'RE NUMBER ONE
MEMBER OF
..V.,.* K-. ...- --- , nacnnocK up
requires a fully experienced “H*.. Victoria Harie.s .■»-I.8174 be- general handyman, exter- Vancouver island fltor
<ki*L...*Ln«i,E* 4 sL. ..-.TiETn Bo* _ •) I e, ,„I,. lor and Intarlor pa nting, cabinets,} COVERING ASSOCIATION
alterationist for our mefiB” clerk typist for construc- p.ni. onlj. carpentry, plumbing, cleanups.;
wear Dept. Applicant must tlon and apt. management office, sales ~lfading ' to —caTcc Evenings QUADRA 38B-293J
beiuUy converaaot m aJI nT^J^wfe^r'n il^EO^NiToBrAL-Som^
aspects of tailoring men a ^***''^ victoria Frees, training program, guaranteed sal- dailv. V» hour — l hour lol»,'
garmento. Esccellent wages b®* '3*- .ary arid high potential, profes- specialty. I^ee estimates. Victoria,
TELLER REQUIRED. EXPERi- swna income. Wa. reoolr# an in-. Press Box 72. __
and company Deneitts. preferred, small ^dw^tawn Si**?!!?!?^^.£**1^.11'' BABYSITTING IN MY MOMS. IN-'
DISTRICT OF OAK BAY
PARKS AND RFLRHATlON
COMMISSIOfI
FAC:L;i. -.ir'.ENANCE
PERSON.
COUPLE FOR LARGE ESTATE.
Victoria area. Cook and house- Opportunities .. . , _
keeper or cook and handcmank.soon to deliver Th* Daily Colonist
Permanent position. Private In me fcilowina areas — Fort st,-
quartes plus board and sala'Y. Yates area. Oak Bav-Baach Drive,
A /%T kl^llf company beneilts. g„ce preferred, small downtown dostrlous person with the capacity ^.wsiTTiNG in MY MOM
Al T NDW ’<^- 'SUS"T.iiV'5 iEld5"«iLi5;“:
MV-I llVyil sonnel Office, Tues-Sat, 2-4 Toronto Dominion, Yates and business. Please call 385-1487 to ar-
ftwiaewei o—range a personal interview. * raie*. --
TLJie /-LJA. 1 eui-giu,- BnetTinki 90«* reference*. Apply and Fairfield Rd -Moss St. areas!
THIS CHALLENGING POSITION J05-3400 Douglas Street. 382-4274 Oellveriet'are made In the early
requires unskilled and semi-skilled . —. mcrninq so will not Interfere witr
available ___
S.VANiai EMKRGKNCY
PROGRAMME
SEARCH and RES<XE
SERVICE
Broad. _ _
EXPERIENCED LE(5AL SECRE-
tarv required for commercial cor¬
porate and general corre-
spondenct. Shorthand an advan¬
tage. ability t o wo rk on own inltla-
wor'k In the oowation and mainte- EXPERIENCED CARETAKE"r other'actlvlt'lei: 'fhls”ir'vour”oiH SERVICE five essentlel. 8900. 3B6-to21. _
nance ot Ice rinks end swimminq cou'ile required Oct. 1st tor tx'nuoltvfo ('’om 8800.00 to c.n p.,:, mrut LITIGATION SECRETARY RE-
pools together with all associated jo-sulte apt. Duties to Include ran- oy«f *'•000 oer veer depending on b**'® K® quired for pleasant conganial of- _ _ . ^
cuildings and ea'upment In various tals and comoleie care and main- 1'*?, '5riL 7 ^ 1 .®?- in^ flee. Legal experience an absolute —- - - - EXPERIENCED JANITOR
recreetlon faclliMes In the municl- tenance of building. Complete re- JfriiriXmn ^m*fe^tJ?*^k» a/'No *1 Fir?- must. Shorthand praferrad. PER-'wants papmanent work. BondaWa.
paiiiv. The maintenance functions sume to Victo ra Press. Box 134. Circulation, 383-4111 today). P-mjtor ten j^s ^ fw. i Pij^e- 386-9021. •?" required fmmedlefelv, no pre- 3864275.
2
lArir'/ULCAoe rtxi 'ow'oeTr CALL THE OLD CANADIAN AN-
BAY REAL- light deliveries, errws,
Jm- handyman chores, etc. DaiiUng
; prices end s«-.lce. sn-OKt. -
excellent training facilities and:LOVING DAY CARE IN MY
our conditions of service m^noma for vour prt-schoolar. Start-
stcobd to nooa. Call: FRro.ing Septambar. K-Mart-'*-
PHILIPS at 598-»21 for a I^hool kob- 4^-3814.
confidential discussion. '... -
EVERY MONDAY
ST. J(^EPH’5 HALL
745 W. BITRN.SIDE
47^7413
FI\''E I-IAIU-Y BIRD
(iAMES. 7 p.m.
^ Games
G.oo'l Neigh'>ors and
Bonus C'sames
^lj--S20-.S25 Games
PLUS min. Jackpot $100
5 Extra Games
ARMY. NAVY AND
AIR FORCE BINCK)
CURLING RINK
EVERY SUN. 6:30 P.M.
Admission $i 5 cards $2 ence
SA.INICH EMERGENCY
PROGRAMME
AUXILIARY
FIPJ-: SERVICE
mum of ^V‘yi;;;-“%xi;SrUncV"in V^^uTredr b^jt'yrarsi;;;^.!^^^
Travel Agency or Airline. Victoria sary. For more information phone: iJPi*...'!?**•"• "hona » 4 - 94 e 9
Press, Box 117. _. 384 - 4423 . _
383-5018.
inp. pool heatinq and flltra?fon, as WANTED PART AND FULL FIRM OF CHARTERED ACCOUN- i TELLER AND be bondabie. Excellent salary Plus
well as custodial and cleaning lime personel to sarvice and sell tanfs requires experienced Accoun- experienced stenographer r#. commission and fringe benefits,
tasks. This work is normally per- Elechr^ux products on Salt Spring tant capable of preparation of fl- .1*qulred for the Bank of Conwnerce. For appointment, please call
'orm«l without dlr«rt jupeA.I.loo •"'I "* IsHndB.. No oxiwfience noiwlil Ms'emtnts. KnbwlJdS M f«?iSIl! Cordovo Boy Road. Ploo».3»0«t.
and i, conduce 00 . tfii" Bosa. la*"’' tgS H Suoligor? wjiw i ' NEED EXTRA MONEY"- . .. .
-- - - - THt QUALIFICATIONS INCLUDE .w . ' e Of Saanich Search iftd Rtscue Ser- TRAVEL AGENT FOR MID- Sell Electrolux products m your .478-9148.
GORGE SOCCER BINGO sHfieSm fo/mii °S!llca^^^ «4^FSrt St5Jrt.^ViSirF4?®i«enfton'''‘®«-time. .No sailing .experience
allow successful writtan and oral c^^tinn Mr. R. g. Pawlok, C.A.
communicaticns with a manner . w. rew ux. v..**.
arrf »PP««rence compatible with vict^ PrLs® Box B DEPARTMENT STORE
this puchc contact type of work A salon requires hairdresser, male
qood knowladg# of the operation - "uerview. female, no clientele necessary,
and mlnw maintenance of ice MARINE SERVICE AiUNAGER. High quaranteed salary and-or
resoonsiWe person con>m|8Sion, Excellent working . k«.|c fire4lahtina eoursa ot ten pari-nme cxperienceu leuer*. oersun. aopiv m wriTtng to n»e ••
"» nMd«l. Exnriincgd orrterrrt. ondilxms and ^plng WnellH. * Aooly in oerwn or Dhone 5H-453S. , Vl«, St. ■“
niedSt.rement and handlinq rf Aooly by resume to Victoria Phone Raymond Salons at 386-3322. - -- — -
chemical purification additives. A press. Boxes. --
wo'^kinq kncwledre of fcuild'ro
maintenance end cleaning routines FOUR PERSONS FOR CAFETE
a''d fho^e safety prereufions nec- ria. Must hava experience. Full WANTED: EXPERIENCED, MA-
essarv for the protection of stiff im:e. l?-9 p.m. inqjire Scandia ture cook for family- restaurant,
members end the public. t-n..-. —.
CHILD pkRE, KINDERGARTEN
age. McKenzie School. Lunch. 81X)0
hr. 479-1452.
PART-TIME TYPING AND OF-
fice work. For resume phone
CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANK OF /•^IRCriM'C i^2«'
Commerce requires at Its Hillside (jIDDUINd «5« Available Immadi-
_ Shoopinq Centra Branch, full-time .Ladies' Wear requires experienced 479-4541.
eouTB* of ten parl-time experienced tellers, person. AmIv In writing to 7M
**nn*e_ yi leu ccx.xnc ct » »--
Mrr^Bra.dw^. Relies C^fcn! EXPERIENCED ' SECRETARY AGGRESSIVE PERSONS
trel. '5’ required for growth company in quired to sell Mobile homes tor
/p“vid£TachOTraK on u? expending Arm. Phone
BANDS, MUSICIANS
and ORCHESTRAS
Carpet and lino installed, we're
not the lowest and not the highest
BUT WE ARE THE BEST. Free
estimates. Call 439-9155.
PROFESSIONAL FLOOR LAYER,
car^, lino, tile and repairs. Fret
estimate 3844423.
WILL INSTALL CARPET, LOW
rates. Free estimates. Phone after
5 p.m., 383-9327.
Oenient Coatractort
MITCHELL BROS. CONCRETE CO.
Basements, driveways and patios.
For quality workmanship call
384-7501.
SPECIALIZE IN BASEMENTS,
carports, sidewalks, patios. Free
estimates. 388-4806.
Ofooup Servlcet
diversified responsibilities.
SenJ
474-1268.
EVENING THUNDER
Rock. Country, Blues
SALARY RANGE: 81080.00 per
month (1976) with excellent fringe
benefits.
CLOSING DATE: AUGUST 31,
_ 595-7109 382-2510 attics, vards.^ ^^|troction sites,
;s".’^li"SShrKfk.« S7‘a'iS!!o''“i IK' fSI’V.rtii., SS«’w, 4iil^“Jtc^,5!lS»'iT5
a*-”"'- _ ' _
''1*®"...°’ responsjciiiry. ^ A....i<i>r.. cir* it? ctAtina oiaI ftexfisns. --
URGENT. WANTED TO WORK ,, . oc-*.Tion rA«oftn,.rii.n, -__ —_....... _ _-.. -- _
nitrhtt. Ralia'-.le babysitter tor tof »( Saanich Auxiliary Fire Ser- 112 stating qualifications.
>29 with complete resume. vke. To enroll, telephone 388-5531. cLERK-TYPisT REQUIRED 8-4
Phone
Mr. D. (Dune) Russell,
Perks and Racraatlen
Superintendent,
1975 Bee Street,
Vietcria, B.C.
AVON
5 early bird games
2 Sc a card
20 regular games
ist Jackpof 8100
3nd Jackpot 8200
5 extra games
25c a gard
840 a game or more
FREF, BUS TO TOWN
In aid of Vatarans, Juvenile sport,
Senior Citizens Ho using
NOTICE
Monthly General Meeting
...... ... rn show you
LONCXJN BOXING 384 - 7345 today.
CLUB AUX)TIOL
Will be held on Monday and DRY OONSOLLER
August 23rd. at 7 p.m.. at Workir^ qjrejuslv^y In Duncan
•• - ^.W.W.W lurc VUUA lUI ,0111117 I 0*10 Ul fllll.
Food Palace. Town and. Country Must have own transportation as '^®I®£
Shopping centre. job involves . '* •*'"**'•
hour week. :__ __
pcsition cf responsibility
.. “ "" - -- -- BOAT SALES POSITION
-- - Immediately available for an expe-
HANDICAPPED voiiNQ wdaaam' OPPORTUNITY AS JUNIOR days week. S^me telephone t^rt;. rlenced person. Apply by resume.
- r^ui?es voutSer live^n ternxu Partner at Victoria AAushroom ence, heWu! Particulan In wrHing victorta Press. Box 45.
Rofl.fgt, toe «A 4 P«ie«.i i-wras. REQUIRED IA4ME Dl ATELY, Mmi^Ion^ %kisakaa^ M^st ^ ^ *'«• te Victoria Press, Bj"
housekeeper-attendant, have driven licence bec'aoable*^ for young person Interested In tak- eyKsiPMCPD
~ iw rress. oex izA _ Interview. Job commences Sep- poujios nry mushroomswr square , never 388-4271.
ftOBv^iTTPD ljcencrC“c>tB~i;r tember i. 383-7837 ^0®^ bad area per crop. Require- T''” -
-85-1 544 after 4 . _ _ _ otrsooeUtv, enthusiasm and good toria Press. Box 146. State back-
MY NAME IS SHAWN. I'M TWO P«f>on Monday, ground and reason for applying,
veers old. would like to have *'"• F.m,
someone lock after me vwhliei'i^" "j”*'®®-_* _ i i j
,Aitommy works, my home. 479-5640i , „rT-r** VonCOUVer S Ond
PBE-RECOBDED
MUSIC
MUSICBOX SYSTEMS
COMMISSION MEDIA AOVERTIS- The professional approach to dis- 382-1753.
INSURANCE inq salesman. Blue Atouia Produc-• cotheque services. Fully expert
Immediateiv. •• .. - --. -.---. • • .
BASEMENTS, GARAGES,
attics, yards, cleaned and rubbisn
hauled away. Will purchase any¬
thing of value. Special rates for
Old Age Pensioners. 384-4408.
TEAUfEIW
w.^hAi. ensure responsible men have
’'■wck- Basement, attics,
•♦®- Very reasonable.
nerntirsn _ th* Bob's. 386-2451 anytime.
5? Pay MATURE RELIABLE HOUSE- '*tl RpC^Oft Hotpl
-lonpv to < hours day, 5 days week, !?* to hgip their local eommunl-i INCOL/I I I ILJId
y cokinq Included. Car essential. No tltA Your _axperl#nca needed _l«rl r»-„jr*s tuOv exoerlenced c
Experienced teller re-:
? jlred. apply fn person, Bank of i
ommerce. Sidney Plaza branch.
requires fully experienced chef > Tuesday to Saturday.__|
cook. Full time employment '
jaftero P.M! .. . 1 LIVE-IN HOMEMAKERS
TOO MANY BIIXS?
them all and have money lu rnefuaM.-c",. ¥0 IlPi.XS't'Ki’g?' .Kb,..*--,
spare w-ith Aswi earnings. irm«Y. Rwiy vktori, PrM$ box 'Ji.fi™, ^..- -- .. legal steni
how rail s 4 i£.®* * a'^L •*,*ultablv qualified appircant. salary * 5 ®*^
EXPERIENCED-t^^'AWA. Vlctwl^ lw4h'p'o“1Sl
waiter wanted. Also exoerlenced THE ART GALLERY OF| r\/rsrr i nk i/^rr\ ‘ — -
bos boy for evening shift. 10 p.m. Greater Victoria requiras a cura-’ cXPcRItNChL/ 23
A»,y ^. roM„ AA.C-S, , “
Aciuiujil^nt axtl#r\/ evr^rionce part Tima. Apply in^erson nnOn-
*®J'®1J L’$?®^ ®v®®: rtxw.Thur^av >#»w*en 1 And 5
I
LEGAL SECRETARY REQUIRED,
for lawyers office. Conveyancino >
I experience essential together with
, good typing. $900. 386-9031.
advilrtisements in
THIS CLASIFICATION
MUST COMPLY WITH
THE
BRITISH COLUMBIA
HUMANRIGHTSACr
SCHOOL DISTRICT
loccaslon — the __—
■ From WAVE Western Audio Visual I
’Entarprises 3 83-gn, 24 hours. j
Iwayn¥-'s“music for all oc
casions, reasonable rates, phorte
479-4835.
® Gutti
BUS NF.i-l es
and DIRECTOR V
Appralaals
Mason Street.
RCAF ASSOCIATION BINGO
O'd Aqe Pension Hall
1600 Government Street
JACKPOTS
t—850 1—8100
DOOR PRIZES
GOOD NEIGHBORS
Admission Card 81.00
Extra Cards 2 Sc —6 for 82.00
Proceeds to support Air Cadets
and 800 Pacific Yooth_Ch 8 rttle 8 _
BINGO
OAK BAY MINOR SPORTS
Every AAondav
Early bird games — 7 p.m.
8 ?S a game or more
20 regular games, 7:X p.m.
Regular 0 am«.s, 6 cards 82.00
5 Extra games
S 2 S a game or more
Extra games. 5 cards 81
SENIOlf CITIZENS HALL
1442 MONTERY
to 6 a.n
617 Gorgt Road, 384-9547.
R E Q u 1 R E D i««EoiATELY, “Appi^in ’
live-in hous^kcener attendant, i 1040 Moss Street, victoria Hillside Ave.
WANTECK'-SEPTE«BERrT,VE.*L7^S;i"^=.0^,f.^^
l./tr , .llaGsSSef' Nartf™ rv,.*- 5:7.«5* a- S3;-ao,. early mm-i.ng Above avereoe earnliws.
Ic. v« M7. ,c&'Sfa w _ _ - '■w-_
wollcama Ai.omS ilt.n, 197«. _no chlMren—OACealooel cook'ri! fFtt^ED: BARTENDERS, PART- RELIABLE SITTER REQUIRED
r\ ^ -v n' r c c-rarnr ntr* • per month. 477-4439. Hifi* ahd weekends. Could work, for 2 children, 3-5 days per week,
u c, .N 1 l a 1 aiAfl* tUL- — into full-time io*' for right person, creferablv niv home. Call after 5
OPTPFD FOR Nl-’W RETIRED COUPLE TO Salary negotiable. Reply to Vic- p.m.. 388-5650.
DENT A I. OFFICE IN *avellaS'’'fn DINING ROOM HELP, MATURE
T>T/—tr»»/^xn-v return. Apply 595.1533 ^ EXPERIENCED HAIRDRESSER person preferr^. Apply in person
kKTHMOND anid for ladles' end mens - air- attar 4:30 it the Peacock R^au-
Fxneriencad receotlonists, dental APPLICATIONS ARE BEING AC- Styles. Busv Shopping centre and a rent.
hygienist certified dental essit- ceoted tor the position of chamber- busy shop. 477-8912 or 477-0209. —
:a'-fs. and chalrslde assistants, P**T time. Scottsman Motel.
Please phone 926-3234 to arrange Gorge Road East,
for interview.
1888, victori a.
SKllXJ^.I) TRADES
I
.ADVERTISEATENTS IN
THD' rr,AASrFTCATTON
MIST COMPLY wrrn
THE
BRITISH COLUMBIA
TR'M.'.N RIGHTaS act
APPRAISALS
PROFESSIONAL FEE
APPRAISERS FOR ANY
PROPFTRTY ANYWHERE
BROW BROS.
onBLANSHARD
.*^85-8771 ^anytime)
PROMPT—EFFICIENT
'dt, basemente, hauling of
..rts. Complete ianitorial service.
-Gutters cleaned. Call Larry,
.147 7-8711 o r 592-6131. _
MAN WITH ^ TON 810-HR, OR
I tree estimate. Composts, yards,
garages, basemsnts, days or av^
j Wngf^hona 38M1» Eugene. _
MAN WITH 3 YARD DUMP
’ I truck, smell hauling lobs, for sand
and gravel delivery, $14 per hour.
. I 479-IW. _
I CLEAN-UP
iBasentenfs, yards, compost boxes.
Large and small hauling. 658-5404.
0
atsty from qualFied Individuals
with university training and exten¬
sive school couhseliinq experience
to establish an alternative educa¬
tion program for adolescent boys
and girls.
In co-operetion with other sehool
District staff the successful appli¬
cant will be responsible for a
group of approx. 12-15 adolescents
including Individual and gr-uo
ccunselling, family and profev su.mm D(uioia& street
sicnrti Mason, individual and class Do««i «8 5 »tteeT
activities and proiacts, work study
excerience for those over 15 years,
G. .TACKSON LDHTED
AM Types of Real Estate
Appraisal anywhere on
Vancouver Island
Appliance Repairg
PAINT YOUR HOUSE INSIDE OR
out, general repairs, raasonable.
479-4444.
Contractors
TAXI DRIVERS REQUIRED.
SEMI-RETIRED OR PART TIME -AAust have Class 4 and chiefs per-
-- person to do maintenance, etc. for mit. Apply at 585 Pandora,
— .WANTED BABYSITTER MON- small condominium. Reply to Vic- 383-1121.
CAL-GLASS 157, SLEEPER '^vtp Friday for l-year-old In toria Press, Box 121. muamtc d- aaRvciTTPP —rvi^o ’
seats, full top, bowrtlls, aux. jWoolco «rea. Phone Sunday after weiJTEn cno cuai i ey' le* ^ .nt.mh.r °i
bracket Marc 4 aML ettt RcMiHriin. 12 noon. 383-434D COOK WANTED FOR SMALL EX- 19, SOPlembtr 1, fulltime, earty
^ rod^dara bSnoer* irtc _ •.•*^•*** 1 . _ elusive steak and seafood houst. hours, 16 month bov, 85 a day.
!cr,V«,t WTLM HAS AN AbPtv In .t ISa B«an Ay M.rl«ld ATM. Att,r 3, -OWStl ;
’ nackage Is 83245. Buy mine (under ^ experienced weltress- •f'u*, Sidney. i d e i i a a i e vuimaam eas
'f'** t' AM'S'CS'I.T- Nf*''' AF- MuMkWi™ Ind
firm. 478-7080.
. peerence. Write stating i
_ . - expe- children. Weekdays 3 to 5:30. Gor-:
I ~T 77 TTT;rrrrTTT 7 ^rm^'CHEF training job for rtence W any, and references to don Hoad. 477-4337.
I HOUSEKEEPER-MOTHERS cook with some expedience, ' Victorta Press Bex 130. b“/v^ •
radio, new tires, immaculate, iust.vyaoet a^ hours 3894!X)33 hrrtinwn - — —- - WANTED: YOUNG PEOPLE OF
[help, 3 days per wwk, for family io am wd So m t>«tw#en reh^blE RELfEF HELP RE- legal age for small flowar sales
rvT/'»^T-Ac«t:’ vrMTD Txrrwvnrlo^ small children, English not . _ . . ■ •-qulred. Knowledge ot cooking.'bujln^. Car necessary. Pleasel
INCREA.^ I OUR INLXzMh, available start- WAITER-WAITRESS W A N T E D Could be steady. Good wiges. fcall 477-8679. mornings. \
SPEAK EFFECTIVELY _ ' [P® I3th^Se^emtor._8l^oer day. 8 for cabaret, suit young dllenfei. Shawnigan Lake. 743-2291. _ PERSON'to''manAGe”bi^CLB1
-DENTAL LAB REQUIRES HELP. »*»P- Exoerlence In repairs end I
MATURE LIVE IN E_LOERLY COUPLE. TO TAKE General duties and .deMvery. State *®!®® P'’.®?®rr!H*-.b?!?r^
PREPARE FOR LEADERSHIP a.m. to 3 p.m. Call 892-7072.
Come and loin the Frank Paulding -
internafional institute of Effective WANTED
British Cokjmbia
Forest Products
Limited
VICTORIA WOOD PRODUCTS
DIVISION
SAWMIU.
REQUIRES
PLANERMAN
N0.1
REPAIRS, WASH-
.ers. drve's, stove. Raasonable
in*«»**^ Million** *o M*. rates. Phone before 10:30 a.m. for
bbMle * M^wbrn^MmSletM .bJIT. 7 »tn.-a.v arvlc, Jim. <77.3SW.
I ABI. CltM*
Applications Officer I
Secondary Education
School District
No. 63 (Saanich)
P.O. Sox 2010
9751 Third St.
Sid^
V 8 L 3S4
Concrete Pumping
Foundation
Damp-Proof Spraying
Form Rentals for foundations
and retaining walls
SpeakTnoT'As pre84nted'bv”the’Vi'c- housekeeper companion for aldarly ®"f® L" driving experience. Victoria
toria Junior Chamber of Com- forgetful but healthy lady. Oak w 8 '*rtront home. 642-3477. Box 123.
■ .lertf. Introductory lessen S#iv ^ Bay, seaview home. 598-3929.
_ _
Send resume to victoria Press Box OPENINGS FOR COUNSELORS S I DI N G APPLICATORS
WESTERN MUSIC BY THE 153. [and manager* with Vanda Beauty; qulred tor Alcan building produ^, Mnlon
■: Counselor. 383-1185. .
Apply Victoria Preis. box 134.
HOUSEKEEPER FOR TPERSON.
Must be fully experienced in all
phases of Wo^ 415 and Yates 66
HOUSEKEEPER COMPANION HOUSECLEANING HELP, FOUR FurttUhtd apartment provided plus P'an^s. Capable of qrlndlng eased
♦or Christian middle aged lady, hours one nwnlnq a week. Deep i other extras. Easy position. No an- edged knives, doing #n meinte-
.— Cove arae. Referencas. 654-6368. 'tartalning. 598-3689. *“** -
SCHOOL DISTRICT
No. 62 SOOKE
'Applications are invited tor the
position of Itinerant teacher for
! Children ' with hetring problems.
Applicants must possess, er be
eble to qualify tar a valid B-C.
teaching cartlflcata, hava had
training and teaching axperience
in this field. Interested aMileants
are requested to submit in epoll-
cation together with supporting
documents as soon as possible to;
Mr. P. B. Pullinger, District Sup¬
erintendent of Schools. _ School
Shady Craak Band will be held at
KlY era. -- _.
....- Sooke River Fiats on Sunday. MATURE PERSON TO HELP EL-
August 22 . al 2 P.m. Tha_ same deny couple In their_home.. S^e ^.?.f.^?JJ?HCED
657-2901.
eogeo Kniw*. ou. . _..
nerce and setting UP of Planers. k. . t *-v_ - n^PT-r-
_ Pate 88.62 per hour, pkie full District No 62, Sooke, 2227 Sooke
RE. LIVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER COM-1 vin% benefit plans available. Rd. Victoria. V9B-1W9.
for lady in Oak Bay. Please direct written applications
598-12S0.
(to:
have added one more for this at-
COCKTAIL FULLY QUALIFIED HAIRSTYL- DINING ROOM WAITER-
bus boys, part-time, ist required for downtown salon, waitress required. Apply at James
. Phone 385-3389. | Bay Inn. 270 (Sovamment. |
traction. Adults — 81.00, children—[JANITOR REQUIRED SMITTY’S j MATURE PERSON FOR OFFICE i RELIABLE PERSON FOR LIGHT ‘ EXPERIENCED HAIRDRESSER,
.50 cents. ConMSslon stand will be Pancake House Colwood. a^y In'work, salary plus
open. I person. Must hevt references. 'Apply 598-1533.
commission.! house cleenlng,
658-8673.,
Industrlel Reletlons Supervisor,
B.C. Forest Products Limited.
Post OHice Box 310,
371 Gorge Roed,
Vktorie, B.C
VIW 3N5
or Phone Collect:
315-3331. Locel 246
THE LAKE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL,
Lake Cowichan, B.C., would like
an experienced teecher to teech
Grades 1-7 this school year. Be¬
cause of limited funds a single
person might be more suitable.
Accommodation available. Write
, Box 312, Lake Cowichan, B.C.,
I phone 749-6081 or 74943 S 6 .
D w ^ ^ w m
GLASS COMPANY LTD.
FOR ALL YOUR GLASS NEEDS!
Windshield replacement torvics
CALL OUT Mobile Home Service
Van. It Is more eonvanlent end
costs no more 382'»31. 382-0221
WlitlATON
CONSTRUCTION LTD.
Genera] Ccgiiractors
Building Consultants
385-5702
Bridal Rentals
GARAGES. CARPORTS. SUN-
decks, renovations, fences, etc.
Fast and afficieni, Experienced
Elite Bridal Ranrats, new business,
spjointments. 477-227$ after 2 p.m.
Carpeotora
Estimates. Fo* no muss, no f ss,
call us. Cramtr Construction.
Residentlel, Commerclel
Ruscraft interiors. 656-2539.
T. AND C. BUILDERS LTD.
Framing
385-5203 38W587
VICTORIA CEDAR CRAFT.
Framing and Genaral Contractor.
Custom designs our tooclellty. Wa
also have a design service avail¬
able. AM work guaranteed.
383-8401.
PLANNING A CHRISTMAS
partvf'Upholstered bars and fami¬
ly rooms our speciality. Book now.
591-7920. 656-4857.
GENERAL HOME IMPROVE-
ment what aver you need done 87
an hour or free estimate. Philip,
47B-266S.
ADDITIONS, RENOVATIONS,
carports, rumpus rooms, ate. io
years experience. Free estimates.
Reisonabie. 477-7511.
BETTER BUILT CONSTRUC-
lion. Excavation, renovation, rec
rooms. No iob too small. Don.
S9S4451.
Classified - Victoria's Largest Proven Market Place-Where Your Articles Sell Faster! Cost Less to Sell - 386-2121
V
f
I
38
COloni0t VictorU. B.C, Sunday. August 22, 1976
80 BI SINESS 8t:R>TrES
■boutv
bruce
r^s
lowther
1 1
and DIRECTORY
Cootracton
BI’RINESS SERVICES
and DIRECTORY
BCSIXESS SERVICES
and DIRECTORY
Ijuttcr Cleaning and Repair Painters and Daooratora
MOUOY-JONES
(OspendsWt Quslltv Prsming)
R. J. RESTALL CONSTRUCTION
Ltd.. Frsming «nd OsntrsI Con-
11 r a c t i n g . Quality guaranttad
1 47S4430.
WHY WAIT, GET BEADY FOR'
fall and wat wsathar. our claaning. i *oQ»iiSu
SSSl'i*? wataroroolino and P^**w-vatlvel
trtatfnant wlU add mrs of aar-|^’L^r*f^‘2‘7'|S-
vIctSe your guttara. and down- 22 :?-
SLVrantlSd'® owromjS. asftm.
Sunday
highlights
, KENNEDY CONTRACTING AND
; Crana Rantala Ltd. Plit driving
I and msrino conalructlon, 479-MM
or aTS-tras.
FAItMER CONSTRUCTION
Oatifn — Ronovationt
SI 8•S12 1
I PAINh^S^C^N^R^TliRS^LTO.
Truth or - “-*■-
axture ar
Aluminum Gutters eruth or' wsv • Pa^rhawTs
5” CONTINUOUS In bakad anamal TaxTure and vinyl wjr wm do
S.CjJ^UMINUM 479>712l'aii or part of any lob and anthaa
''THE NAME YOU KNOW" ttaal Kalfoldino. Rantala of all
•cAui Bte I paintart aoutefniwit. Tarma If da*
I tirad. Phona isa^4S or 384.J831.
PIRESlOE HOLDINGS LTD.
Custom BuHdlno and Daaign
47M475
FOUR SEASONS
aluminum guttars bv axporlanctd j
tradasman. Fraa aatlmatas. f
sss-s74a.
VICTORIA'S NUMBER ONE ^
■aading boma daslgnar and buiidar
596.7311. _ _
FRAMING ^CREW “aVAILAELE f
Brunaau Constructlw,
high” auALiTY,' low-cost;!
guaranteed, framing' and ganaral
caroantry. J83.I115. _ |
FRAMING CREW AVAILABLE.
Raatonabla. Quality work. 479-3754. >
CONTRACT FRAMING
Apartments and houMt. 537.3993
Drafting
ELECTRO¬
MECHANICAL
Complata drawing packagaa for'
production or pretotypa. axoari '
ancad profaaalo n al quotas; contract I
or permanant amploymant Invitad.
Victoria Prau. Box 141.
Drape lie*
1:00 p.m.—An NBC
npecial on contributions
of Spanish-Amerlcant to
the U.S. in generai and
Catholic Church in
particuiar—S.
1:00—Attention. Trek-j
kies: PBS interviews!
I.eonanl Nimoy—0.
4:00—CBC Sunday)
Best: details unknown-
2 . 6 .
7:00—CBC looks back
at the Republican
whingding—7, 12.
0:00-Ray BolgerJ
with the Boaton P^.
Once in love witb|
Arthur?-0.
f 8:00—KVOSrenmi ant
old First Edition muaic
»hour—12. 0-27- _
10:0O-CTV repeal "That was oor look at
an hourlong. Nader-like .. .. .. . , ,
report on the Canadian lighter side ol
clothing and textile the news."
industriea—0.
CABLE 18—1 p.m., Public Eye: 2:00. puppets at Car¬
narvon Park; 2:30, Muaic Victoria; 2:00, Outlook with
Helen Biemes; 4:00, Netural Gardening; 4:30. Jim Leith;
6:00. Arts Calendar.
Sunday sports
10:30 a m.—NFL exhibition, Cincinnati at
Minnesota—7. 12.
11:00—More Canadian lawn tennis open events—2.
l ;-30 p m —The Hartford golf event ends—7, 12.
2:00—More Canadian teimis (fee 11 a m.) with still
more at 8 p.m. Monday—0.
Sunday movies
11:00 a.m.-The Boy from Oklahoma (1954 Will dra^s. sue covers, bed- ^ i-vihini ir,-rii "ir u..;---
Rogers, by Jr.). It could have been lo good and juat *M"Sii^nJ!"*Ph5S!?’M3 !i3«."*' "
1:00 p.m.—Texas Lady (1956 Claudette Colbert). ' Dresemaxio*
Don't write—4.
1:30-The Keegans (poor 1978 lu^iense pilot). Adam
Roarke. Judd HIrsch. Don't wuta your time now or on
(liannel 8 at 2:30-6.
1:30—Red Planet Mars (1952 Peter Graves cheapo).
Just because we're looking at Man for real Is no reason to
look at this turkey—11.
DOWSON PAINTING
CONTRACTORS 385-6042
RfSidgntlal, Mmmprclal. Amps Top-
, line Paint. Homa answaring sar*
vica. Work guarantaad.
39
PERSONALS
RENEW
Taxturad callings.
As low as 30c SQ. ft.
I ^ PhMa 3D4JU
.Tn'teRIOR or EXTERIOR
paintars, guarantaad good work,
i no housa too big or too small.
I Fraa astimatas and raaionbla
raias ohona
I EXPERIENCED PAINTERS NOW
'available to do your house. Iniarlor
I or axtarlor. For fraa astimatas.
36S^A _ __
Pa\lng
DRAPERIES — FABRICS
TRACKS
CUSTOM AAADE AND
INSTALLED
FREE ESTIMATES
1128 Quadra 386>2951
WE'RE NUMBER ONE
Stevens
interiors
ltd.
Ilonih Improvemeota
‘'Kitchen Centf^
2610 Douglas XS-iSai
>4>ecializing in
KITaiEN
and
BATHROOM
RENOVATIONS
Taargest Selection of
KITCHEN CABINETS
and VANITIES on
the West Coast
FREE ESTIMATE
GUARANTEED
WORKMANSHIP
ALCAN,BUILDING PRODUCTS I” AND S STUCCO PLASTERING
Almateo Olv. '■ repairs. Phona 4SM554.
-•iTiIJg,DOLLARS --
' Plumbing and Heating
WARM, QUIET, MIOFORTY
mala, S'r'. Own homa 40 milts
north of Victoria, seeks com.
pantpnshlp of untneumbarad, at*
tractiva, sincara lady, 30-40. No
trifim pleasa. All rtpilas In strict
confidence. Apply Vkforia Press,
BOX II^ _ _ __
Mlb.ISLAUVD WIDOW OF In'
daeandant means. Lonely. Would
appraciata companionship of ra-
spactabia gantlaman, 50-65. Vic-
toria Pr ass, Bex ISO .
BROADEN YOUR HORIZONS'?
Laarn Esparanto. tha International
Language. Camoaun Coliagt Eve¬
ning Class. 479-2S27.
WHO CARES IF YOU ARE
pregnant? Birthright dots. Phona
364-1431. _ ' _ _ _ ;
WANTED SO^ONE'to SHARE I
driving and txpansas to Ontario, {
laavlng Saot. I, Call 363-9729. I
« BtTLDIND SITPPUES
BUILDING SUPPLIES >0
J.S. THE SUN IS
Montarav. R.S.V.P.
DRIVEWAYS — PARKING AREAS
A solid lab at a sansibla price.
Call Barrie Cook at 476-3333 or
479-6953. FREE ESTIMATE
10 BUSINESS PERSO.NALS
DIVORCE
You may not have to ba saoaratad
3 years lo gat Dlyprcadt
1. No money down — monthly
payments
2. Includes lawyer's tees.
3. Your divorce can begin Immad.
For further irVormatton call:
383-6724
LUXFORO DIVORCE
SYSTEMS 41976) INC.
310-620 View St.
AAaafar Charge Walcoma
VANCOUVER OFFICE, 667-3635
•iiUi^ i* .
[IMPERIAL
SURMM kUJBMMUl lA
ThpUhuSyfifymit '
August Pre-
Inventory Sole
ENDS AUGUST 27. '76
a-OSED SATURDAY
(TOR INVENTORY)
I CARPET SALE
: Glen Abbey Saxony Plush.
1 Reg. $15.95 Today $12.95
‘ Gracio«)6 Touch Sculptured
Shag. Reg. $15.95
Cubbon
on Cook
13x13 celling tllas, 64 s.f. 613.49
Callfibra Installed R7, 100 6.f. 7.40
4x6— gyproc 3.39
2x4.w9rA aeono atuda. 25 pcs. 11.95
18" Bi-fold slabs 1.99
4x6—44 sandad dag fir ply io.99
30x60 Prthung mah door 1|.99
Littia barn prt-made 1x10 349.06
1730 Cook Chargax
MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS
SCHOOL
BAND INSTRUMENTS
We carry the largest stock
of rentals on Vancouver Is-,
land. We also service what
VLC rent or sell.
NELSON'S
Music Centre
1315 (30VT, 385-9728
miNG NEW
i^scode
Org<^n Centre
Todav $12 95 Vancouvar's oldast exclusive organ
^ piano dealer.
Twist FTOpylon • •
Now in Victoria
•COMPARE PRICES FIRST."
New stucco ar rastucco, to never:
paint again. Call Tony at Frank
Brwnaltd.. 3S4.n37. _ _ _
!fRED BLANCHARlf 'and SONS
I Ltd- Lathing, plattarlng and stucco
work, rapairs. Phona 866-7431 and
eves. 6^311. __
HAVE TROWEL WILL PATCH.
, Stucco and plaster, 30 veers axpa-
I rianca. 477-1661.
; Days 653-3M1
. JOLLAR5
_— ^ Tharmal Glass
Alcan Siol^
CHARY CONSTRUCTION
SERVICES LTD. 364-3429
Ranevatloins — Repairs
ivaa. 653-3761 K AND B PLUMBING AND
haating, naw construction, rasidan-
tiat and commercial 477-6631.
JUVENESCENCE
(Gii^sang Cosmetic line 1$ a rtvo-
lotionary naw cotlaction of hair
•"d skin cara products. Wa bland-
•d, t^ llnast. most affactiva natu¬
ral ingraldants, along ^wlth pura
Olris^ autTKis and used modern
twentieth cantruy cosmetic techno¬
logy to produce tMs luxurious cos¬
metic line. JuvanaKanca Glngaang
Co^atics are the ultimata in cps-
matica today. Avaialbit wholes^,
•“■
HYPNOSIS
Stop smoking, ioaa walght, tlaao
soundly, master amotions, allmi-
"^vwrs tension, break naoa-
sarvica avall-
• 51 *; ^wltsiional hyonoslt by ap¬
pointment onl'
Manor
H-TVial. Reg. $13.95
Today $10.95
BfII Air Nylon H-Twi«t. voi.m, buying and law overhead
Reg. $12.95 Today $8.95 means lowest prices to you,
NEW PIANOS
Cantrp-59S-4022
Sundance niulti>colored
aculptured shag. Reg $17.95
Today $12.95
Indoor-outdoor latex backed
$2.69 aq. yd.
Roll Ends—up to 15’xl2’—
Slashed 25-40 per cent off
suggested retail. All brand
names—Oelanese, Harding,
Crowley, etc.
SALD OF PRE-FINISHED
PANELLING CONTINUES.
Hundreds of sheets at spe¬
cial pre-inventory prices.
CERAMIC TELE
From 59c sq. foot.
FENCE STAIN
$3.95 gallon
RED ONLY
HOURIGAN'S
Floor Cavaring Spaclailsfs
: NOW SHOWING
DRAPERIES
' PROMPT IN-HOME SERVICE
715 PANDORA AVE. 366-2461
■ Walls «nd attic—4iva do both In ona
, trip.
I THERMO FOAM 363-6383__
Landscaping
BARKER
: LANDSCAPING
LTD.
194
Sarvica and ranovanu .
specialty. 479-971^ 24 ho ufs.
Roofing and Siding
fAr^ANO~CR/^L" ROOFING.
new roofs, raroofad «nd repaired,
free astimatas. Call 476-9656.
SXITISH FSYCHIC MED(UM L. KITCHEV
G. Dukas from London, England,
now taking appointmants for pri¬
vate readings. Mr. and Mrs. Dukas
also faking appointments for heal¬
ing. 364^143.
TAR AND GRAVEL ROOFING,
new roofs, rt-roofs, repairs. Fraa
astimatas. Call 476-9651.
Lawn SDaciaiTsVsT ti'x^a and con 1 H AND R ROOFING
sidarata gardan lay^ and shrub-Cedar Shakes. Fraa aattmatas. Call
piacamam — skatchas — idtaa 6S6-3264.
Our axpart stontmasons can tjuild- -
Talloni
ate. For a fraa comoailtlva aa> I-ADIES TAILORING, DRESS DE
[ALTERATIONS OF ANY
Mv homa. raasonabla
476-338Q.
DRYWALL. QUALITY WORK-
manship, no iob too amall. Fraa
astimatas. 596-6673.
|nm ata. call 595 6333. farm s . ^
, I UNDER $150 AVERAGE
i.'| YARD PREPARED AND
DESIGNED
•GUARANTEED - OR NO
' CHARGE
SUNSET LANDSCAPING
_pae ar 243.
GA^RDEN CITY LANDSCAPING
FREE ESTINU^ES
RMk walls, tiraplaca facing, any-
signing. drass making and al¬
terations. Sortnsans Tailors. 3221
Oak Bay Ava. 595-3115.
OAK BAY TAILORS
Tailoring, alterations ladles and
Oualliy laaihar altarationa.
1626 Oak Bay Ava. 596-4131
Tree Service
MEGAVITAMINS
^ Availabla at
ESQUIMALT WESTERN
.... xy MART
1153 Esquimalt Rd. 366-6451
shaklee'now^available^in
Canada. Non-pollutino BASIC ’
claanars, hypoalarganlc LOVUE'
cream and cosmetics, natural feed
supplanfhtnts. 315^94.
LOCAl“aRT 1ST WILL”ob~^^
trails of homes In tha Victoria
area. Reasonable ratal. Vary at--
trartive, axcallant gMts. samples
availabla. 364-J593 aft^ 6 p.m.
DOCUASeNTS. AAANUSCRlpfrOR
what have you axpartly typed by
l^ai ftcratarv. Divorce a spo-
^aHy. Phono 366-9617.
IMVE YOU A L^GE^ROOM
w^a I can taKn. prafarrieiy
S!*"®’ Vincent CooevH,
366-9153. Nen-smekar. Qoe-drinkar.
TREE SERVICE
ing In rocks. Naw lawns our vice
specialty. No wilts. For a ’ without charoa
complata landscaping atrvica; cedardalE
phona 595-3622. t-euAKUALt
Professional arboritta at your_
Consultatkmt and astimatas
Electrical Conkractore
[ELECTRICAL REPAIRS AND IN-
2:00-55 Da.V8 at Peking (1988 Boxer Rebellion, gaudy | ctnaad alactriclsn!”5?rwar*E^trk,
and not much good), Heston, Niven, Gardner. trllUont - - - _
more— 5 'older homes rewired - no
~ . 1 *10*" payment. Wa finance rhrpogn
2.30-Dnim Beat (1984 Alan Ladd weetem). Look for ® /LFCTPir
('haries Bronson in a minor role. If you must look at all— “ - -
4 Cxcavattng
' S OO-Boy. from Br(»klyn (1952 Bela Lugoxi
garbage)—11. j»«( gnu g,gvgl. gguli^M rgn- rgawngblg rgigj. Cgll 6i2-JTO. injurgg. Ml-SMS gnyllme.
3:30—From Here to Eternity (1953 Pearl Harbor ilrgiigd^'
Oacar-winner). Sure it'i been on TV lately; lf« atlU to- I. c?-
day'x beat by far-7. ^
Maaoory
L. AND B. BACKHOE SERVICES.:
Backhoa, cat and dump truck
availabla for axcavatlon work.
Please phona Larry Davidson
366-1391.
TONY'S STONE WORK AND
lancucaplng, conertit work as
well. ReasonaMa rales. Call any-
tima. 363-6523.
TANO€M TRUCK, SMALL
loader availabla for hauling, load¬
ing and Itvaling for avanings and
Saturdays. Raaaonabia rates.
3B3-St63.
SLAVKO MASONRY, all types Of
brick and Stone work. For Hti-
matts phooa_S954636._
j. HANNAH~fMSONlfY~CHrM'.
nays and flrtplaca facings. 477-5633
avanings.
SAANICH LANDSCAPING
Complata landscaping, stonework,
ft... Aiii.LL ~r .Hdawaiks and lawns. Lowest price.
TiStI.rgiSi’M' i _
7:00—Ring of Bright Water (popular 1989 otterx epic), 'vyelchs bobcat tns diesel) '**‘-'-*
VirginU McKenna. BiU Traven). Part one now. part two ;ac,ar=''"% 4 ,TJfi'S: "Srrg'c'IS'
in B week— 4. septic and drains, ciaan-up. haul-
9:00-Winter KiU (1974 Andy Griffiths TV pilot, Just
dull). Watch for Nick Nolte in a minor role, if you must
watch at all—4.
9:00—Mallory (pasaable 1975 Raymond Burr pilot-
flop)—5.
9;00-A Song b Bom (1941 Dtmy Kaye). If you
must—12.
11:25—Asylum (above-average 1972 Peter Cushing
chiller). With Barbara Parkins, Richard Todd and others
is a good cast—12.
11:30—Navy Bluet (hopelessly hammy 1941 musical).
Martha Raye. Jack Oakie. Look for Jackie Gleason In a
minor role; you can’t misi hhn—4.
11:30—In Broad Daylight (pale 1971 perfect-crime),
Richard Boone. Stella Stevens. Suzanne Pteshette.
Imagine doing in Stella—5.
11:45—The Ravine (creakv 1970 war epic). David Me-
Callum. I'd call McCallum a perfeet example of a minor
superstar—2.
11:45—1 Want to Live (still good 1958 Susan Hayward
Oscar-grinner). Best of a sad late lot—8.
12:00—The Rohe (long, slow and dull 1963 religious
_ TREE SERVICE
MEW AAAN LANDSCAPINO”anD _ 385-9931
.Tpb'g'SJ’o.'SSfd^IJi
MARLEE GARDENS LTD. TREES FELLED, PRUNED OR
topppd. Rtbsonpblp rpMs. Promt
service, insured. 643-S04S tnytime.
TREES TOPPED, LIMBED,
felled. Selective lot clearing, in¬
sured. Free estimates. 364-6677.
BOBCAT
Avglleble to move dirt, gravel,
etc. Reaaenable ralM. 364-6075,
pager 243.
FIREPLACES, REPAIRS, BRICK
or stone work. Reasonable rates
656-4839.
PEDERSEN EXCAVATING.
Beck-hoe work. Sewer Inafalletlon.
Free estimataa. By hour or con¬
tract, 479-5961
Moving
VICTORIA BOBCAT SERVICE,
3-ten dump truck. Landscaplng^x-
cavating. 10' backhoa, reasonable.
363-6101.
DRUM CARTAGE
AAeving end storage. House and
opartment moving, pickup and de¬
liveries. P r et eealo h ar man at com-
petitiva prices. Month-end appoint¬
ments available ta the la^ minute.
363-9661.
.ocal
^ Link Fencing Ltd. For free at-
epic, in CinemaScopp, Richard Burton, Jean Simmons, __
Victor Mature A vawn#r— A i van-isle chain link fenc-
V iciur ivuiiure. a yawner—e. , fences make good neigh
... J ..
TROJAN MOVERS
_ ,_ .moving, careful handling.
ROBERTSON-S EXCAVATING, .» «»"«•» '"rwW F-l-
Case, land clearing, bulldoxlng ied;"*T' on weekands. O.A.P. see-
beckhoe. 595-6530. •'•t**- 2®: van and two men.
-Comparel Phone
FenciDg
^NCIN^AND OATES — ALL j
types in wire or wood — supplied."•' vINO
installed or repaired, island Chain l personal service,bv
• • • - ... - proffssienei movers call Bli,
3164393, Bob. 363-1076.
12:30 a.m.—The Long Ships (ridiculous 1964 Vikings), j bor's. 366-i64i anytime.
Richard Widmark. Sidney Poitier. Makea The Robe look quality-built wood or
like an Obcbt winner-7, """
2:15-LitUe Cigan (1973 midgel-gingBtert. still new
to me). Angel Tompkins. Who's up at this time anyway?—
NOTE; The only radio highlight reported to me Is The I
Rolling Stones Story at 7 p.m. on CSU (890), which is high
but not light.
< ASOVING TO CALGARY?
' Shera txpansas In « rental van,
I Victoria August 3Srd.
Fhwrlaf Md SaadtDf
M&M FLOOR
MEL'S MOVERS
Leoel deliveries and household
movea. Reileble service at reeaon-
iMj-ata^^^. __
STEVE FADER MOVING
AAoving, hauling, delivery. Reason¬
able. References. 478-6244.
Palntbni and Deroratort
ISLAND
DECORATORS
Painters Paperhangers
Spray Painters
Plast^ Repairs
Convenient Time Payments
38.‘1*9059 Eves. 382-1479
$70
1-Br. apt., wefla only
i^ey guelity service
Phone 3S34I65
PAINTING 65.00 PER HOUR
Or contract. Phone Wally or
Brent. 364-4046 mornings or eve¬
nings.
veers experience. 3634363.
LARRY BEATTIE
Lawn end Garden Cere.
3154014
PAINTING AND DECORATING,
reasonable rates, setiifaction
guerenteed. Terms. 595-4905,
479-3471
ing and pruning. 477-6661.
BMB painting AND ROOFING
Ltd. Free estimates, reasonable
rates. 479-4547.
GENERAL GARDENING
lewn maintenance. 366-9210.
I PRO-WEST
ANDcontractors. 366-7132 "We eg
out care m our work". ”
Monday highlights
TENNIS: As noted earlier, the Canadian lawn tennis
finals are on Channel 9 at 8 p.m. with bits on Channels 2
and 6 at 10 p.m.
8:00 p.m.—NBC'i failed comedy pilots are Local 308.
in which plumberrare fnnny, and Snafu, lo which war la a
scream—5.
8:00—Cousteau and his hippos—0.
8:30—Baseball, two National League teams—4.
10:30—Another comedy-pilot flop, Maureen—8.
11 ;30—Geraldo Rivera does his thing—4.
CABLE 18—7:30 p.m., Rick Hammer previews the
(lanadian amateur golf event; 8:30, Puppets Alive, 9:00, ' wsa').' ). crighton, .
torces Beyond with Judy Nyquist; 10;()0, Tony SImnett frank'S general garden. «ars'«xw(r),nc(L* 3 swM»’
returns from vacation. "
Monday movies
12:45 noon—They Rode West (forgettable 1954 Colum¬
bia western). Donna Reed. Columbia westerns ire in¬
famous for their garish color, especially everyone's
lipetick—8.
1:00 p.m.—Mambo (1985 Sylvana Mangano moves).
With Shelley Winters and Vittorio Gassman, but who
watches them when Sylvana moves?-11.
3:0O-So This Is Love (pretty poor 1103 Kathryn
Graynon as Grace Moore. Infarrtous as Merv Griffin’s
only movie biggie—5.
10:00-<?ardlnal Richelieu (1034 George Arllss). Of his
last two great films, this Is much better than House of
Rothschild—12.
* 10:30-The Group (1908 coUege-girls grow up),
Hackett. Knight. Walter. Beigen, Pettet et al. Better
each time I see it—11.
11:30—Doctor. You've Got to Be Kidding (alsolutMy
swful 1087 comedy). Sandra Dee, George Hamilton. Bad
every time—12.
12:00—Forger at London (1981 German dubbed
dross)—3.
12:00—Three In the Attic (so-so 1988 sex comedy). Yvet¬
te Mimieux, Judy Pace. Maggie 1710011. Chris Jones. This
guy fools around, see; so the girls he fools attic him and
fool around—6.
CABINETS BY
LONG-BEIJ. — 15 per rent
off during our pre-inventory
sale. See our displays of
great family kitchens by
LON&BELL including 'the
fabulous ne\v' *'CEN-
TRBPIECE” LINE.
BUY WHERE THE BUILDER
BUYS FOR LESS
Makter Charge—Chargex
2955 DOUGLAS ST.
386*1401
STORE HOURS
Mon.-FrI. 1-5, Stt. 6-13
Mtfnbtr of Victorig HUOAC
$1088
Ocilvtrtd gnd tuntd, 75 vttrg fgc-
torv lound board warranty.
New Organs $889
with auto chord and rhythm*
raw vvjlifira*.* (iviti wtszT.
CASCADE
Organ anid Piano
Warehouse Sales
WHSE. No. ?-]» COSOE RO. E.
Acrou from B.C. Forest Products
Monday—Saturday t04 o.m.
Thursday, Friday 'til 9:00 p.m.
383-8/11
BACK TO
SCHOOL BARGAINS
RECONDITIONED. GOOD QUALI¬
TY STUDENT INSTRUMENTS AT
BIG SAVINGS TO YOU! JUST A
FEW EXAA5PLES ARE:
KING Trombona outfits t1$3.60
ARTLEY Fluta QutfKt $136.00
EVETTE Alto Sdx. Outfits $203.70
D.E. GETZEN Trumpat Outfits
S100.00
KING Clarinat outfits $136.00
EATON'S
SpacialUt In
HAMMOND
ORGANS
for ovar 70 yaars
4 Teachars Availabla
Usa your Eaton Account
Main Floor Esien'i
Homo Furnishings Building
; LAST CHANCE!
ONE WEEK ONLY _ RKOndi
t)to.,d rtolBt Nu(«, LImiltd
numbar availabla.
HALL-FAIRFIELD
I "Doorway to YOUR world of
! MUSIC"
'721 Fort ST _ 365-3307
GOOO^ SELECTION OF ACOUS-
tic and alactric guitars, amplKlars.
mkrophwits, pickups, siring* and
Kcaasorias. Ovation nylon string
alactric guitar. $450.
AAM, « SOUNOI
2031 Oak Bay Ava. 9M-1524
FENDER SUPER'"rEVER*b”aM.
Pliflar, axcallant condition, $450.
Hand mad# Frank Gay accoustic
flat topjuifar. $3H. 479-6456.
GUILD base' CUITWI. js-2
with cast and Sunn concart haad.
axcallant condition, $350, or bast
oilar. Phona 596-400^tt*r 5:M.
UPRIGHT PIANO FOR~SALE.
l^-^^yHas good lono. Carol.
YAMAKI~t2-STRING~ GUITAR.
47*9*65M**' *^*** *'’‘^*'^***^'
YAAAAHA ORGAN'wITh”BENCH.
$29$. Kawai Keyboard Studio*.
366-3913.
ALTO SAXO’pHOn'e'.'ex
cailant condition. Parfect for
school band. Raasonabi*. 479-4358
6- BECHSTEIN "gRAND PIANO,
axcallant condition. Good value.
$4900. M3-I540.
MUST SELL: 1976 "^CONN^CA
price organ. 10 Per cent discount.
Phone 346-94^.
SUNN BASS AMPLIFIERT^S 15"
Elactrovoice best speckers, micro¬
phone stand with boom. 478-7638.
DIVORCE
Victoria DIvorca Sarvkt Ltd.
366-9617.
STEWART
HUDSON
Chargax and __ _
come. Ask about our reni
loase plans tool Beck-to-school
.bargain sale ande Sspt. 4th.
' PAMUS
I MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
"Wharo Good AAusIc Baglna"
1108 Blanshard $1. 366-647$
BEAUTIFUL . INDOOR PO
with sauna. Information 366-31..,
Ouee^Victoria Inn.
CHiTci^SSE^EVENrNGsl
Monday-FrWay. Victoria T'Ai Chl^
Association. 366-7706. ;
CARO READING, MY HOME. AP i
pointment only. 364-1734.
43
EDICATION
SB
TRAVEL
RENO OR VEGAS
FLIGHTS
weekly from Vancouver. DIRECT
FLIGHTS FROM VICTORIA S#0t.
12, 19, 26; Oct. 3. W 17.
RENO BUS
Aug. 31, 31
DISNKYFUGHTS.
CAIJFGRNIA
MARITIME HOLEDAYS
J
Mao QUADRA
St2'4a71
Jhm
"SEE BY SEA"
WING SOME -
CRUISE SOME
Ask about our 1976
Fly-Cruise Vocations
WHITTOME'S TRAVEL
Vlctorla-1111 Blanshard
366-4371
Also in Duncan
J. H. WHITTOME and CO. LTD.
GOLD DIGGERS!
RENO!
Every Saturday until June
30 beginning again Aug. 14!
$124.50 dbl.
DISNEYLAND!
July 10 thru Aug. 28 from
$193.50.
For information cjJl
388>7m
(At the Imperial Inn)
1961 Douglaa Street
Chrlstmaa
Chartera
to
Londen
Dec. 14 to Jan. 2 or Jan. 4
$389.00 and Tax
Tra\eleyd€n
38M201
768 Fort St.
ARtZ.. MESA—RESORT APTS-
Adult cmmty., 11-hole golf, 34-hr.
aecurny. tuii rac. fac.. hid. pools,
spa, naw studio and 1-bdrm, agl.
levfi. turn, w-ilnans, wkiy hskp.
PA)NTiNe AND 'gi'X,*,71
‘M Fountain of the Sun. 6001 E
.•VL"**’”' " Broadway, Mass. Ai. B5306 or call
(602) 632-2600.
VISIT OUR BASEMENT
SHOWROOM FOR ALL
YOUR FLOORING
REQUIREMENTS
FLINT KOTE
12".xl2’*
Floor Tile
2 Patterns Only
19c aq. ft.
OIaYMPIA
VINYI^ASBKSTOS
12'’xl2"
Floor Tile
2 Patterns Only
24c sq. ft.
DOMCX)
VTNYL ASBESTOS
12’'x32”
Floor Tile
2 Patterns Only
27c Sq. Ft
ARMSTRONG
12”jd2"
Floor TUe
3 Patterns Only
29c Sq. Ft.
12’ Wide
CUSHION FLOOR
UNO
$4.99 Sq. Yd.
6’ WIDE
ARMSTRON(i
CORAIRJ':
Uno
$.5.99 pq. yd.
Chargex - Master Charge
I Budget Accounts
4S DANOINO Opon Mon.-Sat,, 7:3)W:30
a*D'‘'Ti»’^!?a*''M)i“i!'o‘Vi( *0.“ iST5;WART k HUDSON LTD.
tar' (J'ui-Tm Ooriit Rd. E. 386-5211
_ DAY CANE
We offer your pre-school age child: I
A good program with kindergarten ’
sybiect*. A warm, coloortul, home¬
like erwironmant: IndlvldusUzed'
altenflon; peril playground at our,
back yard; lunch supplement. i
morning and afternoon snacks. Ex-
ploratl^ l^^rfleld, 591-6763.
^ HELP ' '
For sawars at all lavtis — begin-
ners to advanoad — small parfici-1
patlon clasaasi morninga, after -1
noonsand avanings and Safur- j
day team. Enguira now for rggutar
Md knit classes. Sawyer Sawing I
Cantrts, 640 Fort SIraat. 3664226.
TRINITY
SCHOOL OP EXPRESSION
Voice Production
Public Speaking
Tnaafrkai Tralnino
PHONE 36 6-7190 j
TUTORING
help by axparl
RESERVE A
RENTAL NOW
DON'T WAIT for the Sapfambar
I RUSH — your bast selection of
! School band instrumanta is now.
iWa offer a great selection of new
land near new initrumants on rant
with purchase option or equitv
ilaasa plans. REASONABLE
RATES tool TRY US — We'ra
your Khool band HEAD¬
QUARTERS on tha Island.
PAMUS
I MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
I "Where Good Music Begins"
|1I08 Btenshard SI. 366-647S
WANTED. BENCH FOR ELEC-
trohome organ. 993 a3690.
WURLITZER ELECTRIC PIANO,
good condition. 479-6904, evenings.
YAAAAHA DK-40 TO CLEAR
Kawai Keyboards Studios. 3M-3912.
HANOI) ORGAN*
PROPESSIONAL
lancad tMchar
w and old rnefh-
DRAWING AND
desses begin
479-4956.
PAINTING I
- 6 .'
^ GYMNASTICS i
Polcoo gymnestica Khool-
RooWar before Sept. 477-5 961. j
CHILOREN'S ART CLASSES’
ages 5 to 12. opportunity for crp -1
ativa expr ettlon. 596-1356. '
ART CLASSES — PORTRAIT '
and ganaral, drawing and painting.
Ragisttr for Saptombar.
DOWNTOWN
USED LOWREY Theatre conMik
organ. Walnut finish. Looks rich
and aounda mighty. Wow wow.
Xylophone, AOC, drums, piano,
harpakhord, Lealla 25 pedals and
many nwrt fine organ features.
Priced to clear now at $3,595. Celt
for more Information.
366-2434 612 FORT
^ MANOER TRUCKING 4764332
Agricultural sawdust, ham and fir.
Cedar hog fuel or riding rings.
Evonings 677-5653, 479-7639.
ALDERWOOD. SPLIT AND DE-
livarad. iSO por cord. 6434965 from
6-9 p.m.
doTTt wait ^or winter, get
your _alder new. Dalhr^.
643-5970.
0.0 0 . ALDER AND
mixed, free dalivary. 364-6339.
63
TIMBEB
WANTED TIMBER
FE«LLED. BUCKED or
STANDING
Fir, Cedar or Hemlock
TOP PRICES PAID
Ideal Sawmill Ltd. 385-0441
Home
Lumber
LUMBER SPECIAL
Prka per 1000 FBM
1.8
1178
$169
$199
$169
$ 75
$155
3x4 S
IxN
S1d."fRf: Ham
-- Std+BTR Fir
JxN M-R Shlplap Ham
2x4-6' 2 BTR. Hem
2x4-r 2 BTR Hwn Studi
FIR PLYWOOD
6xB->6a SM. T-O
4x6—6fe Una. 0
4x6-4-16 unsnd.
4X6— 'A sanded D
4x6—4$ sandad D
4x6—sanded D
&}?
US
SPECIAL THIS
MONTH ONLY,
NEW KINCAID
Pianos, Solid Ook
Cose Reg. $1,295
Now $1,095
See Rog. Slone at
SOUND OF MUSIC
PIANO AND ORGAN
CENTRE
1517 Quadra ,*W3-02:i9
IHE MUSIC
GOES ROUND AND ROUND
AT PORTER'S
BUT YOU DON'T HAVE TO GO
ROUND AND ROUND TO PARK.
DRIVE tU - PARK FREE.
OPEN IN EVENINGS
PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION
BERNIE
PORTER MUSIC
7as Caledonia 363-9543
"Downtown Near The Bay"
HAMMOND
ORGAN STUDIO
LET'S MAKE A DEAL
Wa na^ room for our fall ship¬
ment. Coma In today and choeaa
from our selection of NEW, DEM¬
ONSTRATORS. or USED ereent.
Free Parking 3400 DOUGLAS
Across from Town and Country
388-9177
GYPROC SPECIAL
BA RriU)ING AirpPUEA
1 .....^
‘ W Gyproc
Vb" Flrost^
V' Firestop
GARDENER, $4 PER
good worker. 595-3503.
QUALITY AS WELL AS
H 0 U R, price Is impe^nt, phona 595-4434
Ifor a painting esiimata.
PKKAONALS
,r»^NO'rINTER'^fio IN~CASU-
al, meaningless relationships, to
single ciuba, etc., are not for me.
I I'm attractive. Intelligent, en*o-
tionaiiy mature, sincere, congenial
and tnloy tha finer thinga of lift,
finm*"* -‘ *' '
I panlonship, let's find out H ...
could ba compatible. Confidential.
Vlct^a Press, Box 133.
^ ^ . I entertainment ond aoort. If you're
12:00— The Brave Bulls (dated, dullish 1961 matador unencumbered, financially sa-
mistake). Mel Ferrer, Anthony Quinn. More bull than to*" «oo7 .cwn.
brave—8. ..
I2:X a.m—Daughter of the Mind tie(» ESP
xuspenaer; a bit above par). Ray MiUind. Gene Tierney.
Edward Asner. Try it—7.
^ 2:08-G)ai Belt (ISSJ George Montgomery miss-lt)—
2:18—Decision at Sundown (1887 Randolph Scott)—8.
2:28-The Last Angry Man (all right 1188 Paul Muni,
outdated man). Munl’ilMt movie and. thankfully, today’!
last film: and I'm not fooling around-7.
Monday radio
9:00 p.m. —CBC M(mday Evoilng tells the story of the
I AM NOT ASHAMED OF THE
eoseal, because ft is tha pawar of
God for the salvation of avarvena
who baitavas; first for tha Jaw,
than for tha Gantila. For in tha
gospel a rlghttouanasa from God la
revealed, a rlghtaousnasa that 1$
by faith from first to last, lust i
It ta wrlttw: —- - • -
live by talth."
1 16, 17. _
I ATTRACTIVE WOMAN, LATE
30$, Intflllgent, fun loving, worm
panonality, but ionaly. Any In-
talligtnt mala who llkas goad con-
' varsation, dancing, tennis, seacta-
, tor aeorti, and people — please
'contact me. Victoria PrHi. Box
,101.
New York Philharmonic while LeonuidBeinitetn was iU i
‘ ;?rjy'to!is:'*,!<„s isr., r
Lmi-rM <1W.7). Imour, wishes to meat refined, at-
* — R«mmnw»fw4Arf * tractive ladv 25-15 for com-
nKrummenoea. loanionswp, Victoria Press. Box
MOOR! 99MimMITQN
LUMBRR LTlL
MU BRIMI ST.
IXX)RS
Victoria's door haadguartara.
Alt tygaa — antranca, era-hung,
pocket door framea.
Utility Grade Door Jamba
Hamloct and Fir
$4.00-$S.0046.M
Arbontt
Clean-eut Pricea
iSsFL * TfSr*Miy.wORK
manufacturing planY
INSULATION
Price par
SLEGG'S
CASHWAY
LUMBER
ChRck our lumbar pricaa before
you buy I Phona us and wt will
pick i6> your plans for a taka off.
R7x2l6" Fibarglas
R12x3W" Fibaralai
RSOxi" Fibarglas $20$
STUCCO WIRE
)*-)*" $ n.»
NAILS
i(* UM 3U CW. ( IXH
ASHPHALT
SHINGLE
:)! )Wt. M)f SUI /U).»
you buy COMPARI
For WALITY
GUARAN“*^‘
I STARTING PIANO
LESSONS?
$ 69.66 Give yrMirself (he confidence
lita'w Yamaha piano.
Mayfair 386^.l‘»
Bay .'W4-913L
JAMKS PIANO
AND or(;an
PIANO TUNER—CRAPTSAAAN.
Norman_Ouckworth, 598-5251.
KAWAI GRAND ~*PIANo7~ S‘9",
new condition, $4,500. S96-466S
U MUSIC TEACREILS
GUITAR STUDENTS
We are new acceetlng new stu¬
dents hw our enlarged weekly les¬
sen program which this year com-
mancas Sapt. 7. We have a well
qualified staff of Instructors who
are all familiar with confemeorary
and traditional styles of playing.
Our studios art large and comfort¬
able and centrally located at 733
Johnson $t.. across from the John
son Parkade. For information call
S^U^O SOURCE STUDIOS
The principal of the JOSEPHINE
BUTLER SCHOOL OF MUSIC is
opening a naw branch, this Fall,
at Rocky Pt. Rd., Matchosin.
Limited vecancles are available
tor, piano lesaona. rhythm and ear-
training classes, theory; prepare-
Non for examinations If desired.
All ages Further Information
from the principal 476-6603.
CADBORO BAY MUSIC STUDIO,
2558 Chelsea Place. 477-3650. stu-
denta praparatf for all Royal
Toronto Consafvatory theory
exams. Plano beginners to fdach-
ef 2 level. Mrs. C. Rummal. ARCT.
ATCL, RAAT.
sfudenfs for ^ofambwr. AM aoes.
baginnar to intarm^ata. Theory
Interview, call Mrs.
Motherslll, A.R.C.T.. 477.6653.
PIANO TEACHER HAS ROOM
for a few more students In Seo-
lember. Susan Papgaiohn ARCT,
RMT. 363- 6701-
PIANO LESSONS. REGISTER
now tall term. Cedar Hili-HIllside
area. .W7674.
PIAN<r”AN6 THEOR'T'lESSONS
Preoaratlon for Toronto Conserva¬
tory exems. If desired. 592-7633.
PIANO’’teacher. BACHELOR
of Music. Taking new students fnr
the tall and winter farm. 595-6864.
ORGAN OR~ PIANO ’CeSSONS.
Group or private. Kawai Key-
b oard Studios 3t6G913.
CLASSICAL PIANO INSTRUC-
t lon In Gordon Haad area. 4774439.
77 MOTORCYCLES
19^”~HARLEy’^DAVIDSON "xLCH
I" over-axtandad tubas, cuaOem
wrap-around oil tank, drag handle
bars with riaari, drag exhaust.
$1600 firm. I3« F arnwood, Apt, 7.
5 tp 6 p.m. Tarry.
BIG BORE KITS
and Hl-Parformanca came for
fbwERTOWN M.C.
364-1349 D.L.00169A 614 Granville
lar par day. two-v^aelad convart-
Ibla. 150 m.p.0- Automatic trans¬
mission. Beautiful stylinn. Test
drive tha Mobylatta. 366-9913. J. C.
Wright Limited.
lade ANYWHERE
1 IB^NO.
RE ^R PRICES,
SC^RVlce an^
* mna:
1
HOME LUMBER
and BUiQ>ING SUPPLY
470 ARDER&IER RO.
316-3174 ^ 3154711
POR SALE 10 SQUARE II' HAND
split eadar ahaksa. 6B6-IS7A
CAN WEST
Building Matarlala
744 MMford
(off Station Rd.) 471-5509
Serving the Waatam CommunHy
Monday through Saturday.
LARGE CEDAR SLABS POR
patio, gardan adaing or tablaa. 116
QUALITY 16'* CEDAR SHAKES.
Buy direct from meoufaghirer,
476-7746, 363-334].
SPECIAL
USED PIANOS From $495
GLEESON MUSIC CITY
629 Broughton
(near Royal Theatre)
Perking at rear — 366-9632
BABY GRAND PIANO. KAWAI,
Walnut finish, fitted cover. $3950.
3B645I6 after 7 p.m. _ _
FEfJoiR BASSMAN 50, AMP
aM cMlnat, good condttion.
Otters. 99S-7779.
GUITAR-ORGAN WITH ATTACH-
merits, 3 Veka gf Theatre and
horns 656-6495.
MICROPHONES, BASS GUITAR
ai^ practlca amp. Chaap. Phooa
995-5505 aftar 3 p.m.
BRAND NEW PENDER BASS-
man 100. Naw B6SS. Sell for $400.
304-5045.
ANTIQUE UPRIGHT GRAND
piano—Fischer. Good condition.
After 6 p.m. 3I341)6.
HAND-MADE AUSTRIAN VIOLIN,
bow and case, $500. 3164915,
366-3700.
MARTIN 0-16 ACCOUSTIC GUI-
tor. axcallant condttion, fibragtass
case. $490. 993-0523.
SHURE AND ATLAS MICRO-
phones, practice amplifier, ampiifi-
er head, reasonable. 51^5505
... miles on competelv rebufi'.
motor, new tires and ch«in. new
R aint metallic rad. S47S. This bike
as not been llconcad for last 2
veers. 470-5631. __
'66’ b’sA chopper. TOP END
rebuilt, custom painted, extra
parts chromed, all naw wirlno.
$1500 in bills to show. First $1200
steals it. 113-743-2493.
WANTED:’’ONE’'WHfTE ’FIBRE
oiass sadie bag lid for Castiar sad
die bag. Right hand side. 642-5400.
Evenings; days. 6424913.
CLUS^TWIN HO’n’d'a.'WO.'nEW
transmission and oaint, lo.ooa
mllet. low Insurance. 476-4091.
Asking S490.
'73 360 SUZUkToT. GOOD CON-
dilion, lots and kis of extras
11.000 miles. sijMO or boat offer.
479-5057.
1976 KAWASAKI KZ 750 WIND-
iammar fairing, saddle bags, tap
box, immaculate. $3300 value ask
I ng jam otters. 477-5363. 3S6-7340 ..
'73 900 KAWASAKI, IMMACU-
left, extras, $3,200 or bast offer.
Between S:00 and 7:00 p.m.
65 M697. _^
1972 HONDA SL3S0. 350 MILS$ ^N
rebuilt angina, vaiy g^ condi¬
tion. Must aalL BB95 erUm offer.
477-1037.
174 SUZUKI GT 7». WATER
cooled, top condition, 14,500 miles.
Selling at $1150. 365-5903 between
4-7.
HARLEY 45, CHOPPED,
springer front ond. running, noeds
some work. 6900. SH of tat bobs.
366-2509 after $ p.m.
71 HONDA 500-4 FRAME CUT UP
during theft. Corrwlato lets rank,
MOt and battery. OHars from $350.
363-6)69.
1974 KAWASAKI 900. IMMACU-
lala condition, headers. 52000 firm.
479-5472.
1
V
MOTORCYCLM
Coming Soon!
MOTOGUZZI
MOTORCYCT-tS
^ BOATS and MARINE BOATS and MARINE M BOATS and MARINE |M BOATS and MARINT:
1974 KZ 9M KAWASAKI. 1,900
miKs. Extras. S2.0C0. 590-2709.
73 CB 125. $400 6R OFFE'bS.
Pftont 456-4SS4 or 494-4333.
- . AA\4HA __ _
Italy's most ortstloaous motorcyda only 3.000 miles. $1300 . 302-4439.
for unlimited tourlno — in stylel. „
•JO T and 1000 V. "
CAN-AM
The fastest dirt bike in lls class I'
and the new 175 0-R Scrambler.
Order Now!
NORTHWEST
German Auio Ltd. ,
428 Alpha St. . 383-4031 '
Dealer No. 011S6A
R75-6
R60-6
AT
SPECIAL
PRICES
The New
1000 cc Model
Here Soon
FREDERICK
MOTORS
616 Queerw 383-0823
DL 0(1834A
'73 SUZUKI 250, EXCELLENT,
I condition, low mlledbe. 478-2807.
ASKING $350.
BICYCLES
BICYCLE
SALE
Sekines
SHS 270 10-speed
(Chrome moly tutted freme)
Ree. $224.8t SALE $205.M
BOAT BROKERAGE
21' REtNELL $10,900'
V GRENFELL SPOrt Fisher I
$13,900
?4' MONK $49,995
2«'FIBREFORM $32,999
PACEAAAKER Command $23,000
21' SABRECRAFT
I 12' AVON 25 Evinrudt
21' GLASPLY 74
18' REINELL 45 Ev. '73
120' K and C 1975
' 22' BELLBOY
24' REINELL C-Brldga
22' SEARAY
27'EXPRESS Cruiser '73
21' REINELL'74. 85 hrs.
$ 1,999
$ 2,100
$ 9,500
$ 4.500
$ 9,700
$11,900
$13,750
$14,000
$17,000
$ 9,999
OPEN 7 DAYS
At The Marina
1327 Beach Drive
598-3393
Russ Hoy
On O ova m wawi
YiaOHA
IA\
834 Johnson
>WER
INE
AM
386-8:;38
SALE
1975 YAMAHA
ENDUROS
!!<2 GOVERNMENT ST.
Between Bay 8 tm Hlllsida
Th# Ltnlng Bike Shop
384-4723
MASTER CHARGE
TRADES WELCOME
CHARGEX
Open AAon.-Sat. SiX-StSO
Fridev 'til 9
BAYLINER
1-DTIOO
I-DT125
4—OT400
$799
$899
$1399
1975 YAMAHA
ROAD
2- RSIOO
1-~RDI2S
3— RD200
I-R0350
$469
$799
$1049
$1199
MULLINS MARINE
SALES LTD.
$83-1938 383-451$
925 Yates St. OL-0034SA
' 1975 24'4" OH-Shore hardtop with
camper back. 190 h.p. Inboard-oul-
coard. Trim tabs, radio-telaphone,
{dinatTt, geilay pack, swim prid..
I loads 01 extras, $13,000 firm,
I 478-9571, 478-4898 or 479-7019.
iMOVEO TO ' CONDOMINIUM, ■
' must sell 19' Sabercraft, inboard
outboard 120 Mercruiser, low
nours, full instrumentation, new'
3 ONLY ~ a ftOMds 174 95 Sleeper seats. Big sate,
3 ONLY - 10 sMbM $89 W t»at. E»sy Loading
JUNIOR 3 speeds $84.95 i I'i!"*/: "Wtla-
JUNIOR 5 sPMds M’-M «»mo#r as
PLUS A GOOD SELECTION ' *'^*°*- 385-5335. _
^ ^'*?irt'opnrpn'T *{ FiBERFORM BIMINI
OAk'SaY cVcVCLE SHOP li‘|
O.I. lay Avr »«.41ll ij,?, JX;.‘t°Ss nvust selT^as
BUY, SELL, TRADE, REPAIR 1S*"'.!'’new boat.
FRESH
TRADES
2 ONLY
I5'6" Hourstons
■73 CAMPER BACK
—50 h.p. Evinrudp
Road Runner trailer
»5d0
*75 CAMPER BACK
—50 h.p. Jenson
j - AM Radio
Road Runner trailer
$3995
17' Fiberform
-120 Mercruiser
-camper back
—Road Runner
$4695
GIBSON
POWERCRAFJ ^ENTRE LTD.
2S» GOV?RNmVnT ST.
382-8291
Cailfl Calonigt Victoria. B.C . Sunday. August 22, 137S ^9
|M BOATS and MARINE |Si BUA'rx and MAUl.M: I ltd S . > .nil MA.tl.M.
GIGANTIC
METRO SALE
NEW
SANGSTERS
/OOD
LINE
25' MARLIN'
$17,995
(Comm, bridge)
23' CHINOOK
$11,495
22' D^PHIN
$10,995
X' WEEKENDER
X.495
X' S-T W'ENOER
$7,995
11' CORMORANT
$7,495
18' TEXADA
$5,995
NEW
LARSONS
123' ADM. EXPRESS
123' ADM. CUDDY
21' COM. EXPRESS
21' DAY CRUISER
19' MANTA
17' ALL AMERICAN
14' ALL AMERICAN
NOW WITH
2 Locations
TO SERVE YOU
BETTER!
823 Pandora
385-1451
COL WOOD 1
-IWAV)
Mon.-Fri. 9-9
478-8211
SALES AND SERVICE
ONLY AT OAK BAY MARINA
BOATS launchad. painlad, |
checkad, rechecked, tested in the i
water end ready to go! Gasaad up,:
keys In — no extra cost to you!
Canada's
Largest
FIBERFORM
Dealer
I
Compii
USED
73' GREW HARDTOP
' Twin power
;72' BAYLINER
l21' REINELL
WE SERVICE
Vif MERCRUISER AND
VOLVO I 'O
I
USED WITH
TRAILER
14' K-C. SO H.P. O.B.
17' ISLANDER. 105 H.P.
14' fiberform. 45 H P.
16' GLASTRON, 45 H.P.
IS' K-C, 45 H.P.
15' LANE, 45 H.P.
14' FORMULA. 35 H.P.
$3995
$3995
$3495
53295
$2495:
$3495
$2795
BACK TO SCHOOL
SAU*:
Otai dirKt with quailfitd,
BEST BUYS NOW
on new HONDAS AND SUZUKIS
COLWOOD
HONDA
Oiv. Mullins Marine
2781 Millstreem 478-8831
Left off Hwy. at
Western speedway. D.L. 00344A
ONLY 2 LEFT.
Brand New '76
HARLEY DAVIDSON
KLH’s
BROOKLANDS
MOTORCYCLES
937 Fort 38:J-5926
DL 1372L
NEW BLACk'lEATHER JACKET
and gloves, large, fully jlpoered
$75. 452-3032
1974 ' HONDa” 340T, IMMACULATE
condition, 1,000 miles. A steel ei
$ 1 , 200 . 3 ^ 5803 .
1974 ‘BULTACO ALPINA 250, FAN-
fastk trail bike, perfect condition.
Extras. $M or bast offer. 477-1037.
1974 “’hON’DA~' 7»V EXCELLENT
condition, 81,800. 384-9482 after 4
P.ITK__
1973 YAMAHA 7S0CC WITH 104)00
miles, needs minor repair. $$jo.
458-870X_
ALMOST NEW 1975 HONDA 750
four, immaculatt condition. Best
offer. 442-3974-_
125 YAMAHA TWIN 950 ORIGI-
nel miles. Immeculate condition.
$325. 4«-5^3.__
STUDENT MUST SELL '74 YA-
rnaha ISO Trials. Many extras.
Must be seen. 458-5458.
1972^h6nDA JSO-4. EXCELLENT
running condition, new battery.
$1,000^385-3392 after 5 p.m.
1971 KAWASAKI JOO. 10MO
miles, excellent shape. $750 or
oflef$^477-3170.
1 * 74 ’ HONDA’ XL 175, Ex¬
cellent condition. 1890 miles. $495.
477-^79._
1949~HONOA 450. GOOD CONDI-
ilon. Sell or trade for 290 Trails
model. 479-472 7.
1975 ^HOTi^DA 3J0 XL, Ex¬
cellent condition. Offers. Phone
John 454-4592. _
1973 YAMAHA 175 ENDURO. EX-
- celiant, extraa, $490. 7148 Grant
Rd . SMke. 4^-5?9«.
1973 YAMAHA 900 CC, A-l CONDI-
lion, lojw mileage, low price.
$1,200. 4^-9569.
buckled wheel. New, used . ..
all sizes, lowest prices. Open 8-8;
Sun. 12-5. 384-9514. ^eno Indus¬
tries, 2^Govt. (Se ll used w heels).
GIRLS RALEIGH 3 SPEED,
good condition. One small girls
C.C.M. bike, good condition. One
men's Raleigh 3 speed, with paper
carrier. Ideal for paper route.
382-0543.
First $7,500 takas. Phone Waiter
--- Burford at Oak Bay Marina Salts
and Sarvica, 598-3393.
25' FIBREGLASS COMMAND
bridge Cypass erulsar, 9'4 beam,
modified V. OA4.C. 225 h.p.. in-
^rd -outboard, tabs, enclosed
head, stove, fridge, full canvas. 2
VM^old. $18,900 or best effar.
1974 FIBREFORM 22'4" COM-
mand bridge with tandem trailer,
RENO SPECIAL — BICYCLE sleeps 4, stereo tape, CB radio!
tiros. $3.49, ell sizes: tubes, $ 1 . 49 , sour>der, swim grid, anchor pack
all sizes. Used bicycle sale with and many other extras. Excellent
one month guarantee. Reno Indus-1 condition. Asking $14,500. Phone
tries^2^19 GovT_, 744-4432 aft er 12.
ONE MEN'S 24" 10-SPEED! HANDYMAN SPECIAL
Champion Sekint, good condition;34' DIESCL displacement Coventry
$80. 1178 Fort St. Please come be-|diesel, f.w.c., excellent llveaboard
tween 4 and 9. | needs finishing $1S.M. On display
«EN'$ PEUGEOT- 10 ^SPEED, 'S*,S)J,
many extras. 477-2128. _ -- - _____
25' BAYLINER SARATOGA
dard. good conditjom 3«^3w. . ^^mpiet^v^ aoulpp^ with full oal-
. 0 , 1 .S aMl .MAiaNl':
PERFECT WEEKENDER — IM-
maculata 1975 Bayilnar Skagit
off-ahora cruiser. V-8 power (188
MtrCrulsar). Features: Hardtop,
canvas back, enclosed head, gal-
’ley. dinette, sleeps 5: plus CB
radio, healer, compass, anchor
package, all lines and bumpers )■> .
and complete safety packm plus jJhnsST^i ^iJKSSld Si5o<'
much, much more. Recently com- Qn eisoiaw
serviced Includlno anti- ?P Marina. 453 Head
493 HEAD ST. 383-3324 ( 24 hrs.)
26' TROJAN
C o f m a n d Bridge, 233
ChryBler, Waller V-<irive.
radio-tei. sounder, perfect
cruising boat in bristol con-
ditim.
MUST BE SEEN
$16,900
SPECIALIZING IN
LIVEABOARO BOATS
OPEN 7 DAYS
(AT WEST BAY MARINA)
IN ESQUIMALT
Bank Financing!
Trades Welcome!
Open Daily Till 9
2360 Beacon Ave.
Sidney 656-1105
IMARINEI
SUMMER
CLEARANCE
SALE!!
ON GLAS PLY
BOATS
COMPARE OUR
PRICES
21' Express
Stock No. ..
stock No. 109
Stock No. 144
3ion Boats
16-M'
Grew Boats
Apollo Boots
B'
Songster Boats
lata 14'
Fairlone
22* and up
Penn Yon
TUNNEL DRIVE BOATS
34' on Display
Jeremy Sez Pleeze ! !
Sell these Uzed
TURKEYS
15' MONK 0-B
21' STARCRAFT New
17' K and C 1.0. Deep-Vet, Traii-
ar. Would you ballaval $2999
HERE NOW
'1977 22' BAJA
L —188 Mercruiser
I -Command Bridge
I Dual controls
I Stand-up head
I -Full galley
--FJnrlosed fwd. cabin
MUST BE SEEN
;I8' SURFRIDER
•63 Mercury elec.
-Road Runner trailer
-Fbll canvas
—^Tonneau cover
-Built-in gas tank
$4995
A Boat for Every
Budget at
MERCURY
MARINE
385-1457
800 CLOVERDAU:
OPEN FRI. NITES 'til 9
- . - Now $10,995
SAVE $3,000
21' Express
stock No. 107
-170 Volvo 1.0.
—Standard Equipmant as
abovt.
WAS $13,499 NOW $10495
SAVE $3,000
171 / 2 ' K and C
—IX Volvo
—Campor back
—2250 EZ-Loader trailer
—Welk through wln^hield
ONLY $6,595
19' THUNDERBIRD Quality Deep-
Voe I9S h.p. OMC Rebuilt by u$l
Fabulous sea boat. For tl»hfng ttc.
$4999
MERCURY - Honda!
outboards
DOUBLE EAGLE
boats
HONDA
ix)wer products
ley, ^’eocloied ’haadV" ‘dVnqlTv.' '
I MULLINS MARINE '
MUST SELL, 21 FT. CABIN SALES LTD.
Cruiatr, iw H.P. Evlnrude. head,
1$ gal. fual tanks. $37M.
W2-3528 or V law at Sooka Marine
Industries No. I4K9778.
FISHERMAN'S SPECIAL
pletely serviced Including anti- ,,
fouling, best offer over $10,000.
3134140 effer 4.
St., 383GX4.
_'IJ'i','..*'??? BO*T WITH WIND.
«■ DRIFT.CRUISE, TWIN /oSllOR ’■M5''’«rlS"1'lKl.lb!'"lASM:
Chrviser. I-O's. Onan ganerator, guar trailer with spare wheel
deep freeze, complete gaily and In axcallent condition,
many extras. Reduced to $ 29 . 900 .; <^B-58X.
9." ‘laser ■F.' Gr'sAiLiOA-r
expiate with peddle and
Ilf# vest. Roadrunner trallar
snare and lack. Wired.
St., 383-3334,
GULF ISLANDS 29' F-G
Sloop with new Ferymann dlascL soa.i 7 ei
top condition, many extras. _
$25,700. D. McCartney, Box 1388,11 BEDROOM
Victoria. Bus X7-5975, rts. X2-5403 1 modern daaion
or 477-1783.
•dull
r vMh
$1^ „„
FLOAT HOME,
440 so. ft. com¬
pletely self-contained, i year old.
ii. j Olsolay AAaca Marina,
Chrysler (Jutboards «« H,»a si.. 383.m,.
See us for Saies-Perts-Repeire l24’ REINELL COMMAND
KEN PRASING EQUIPMENT ibridoe. 188 AAerc. cruiser 1-0 Ex-
478-9313 800 Goldst'eam I pensive accessories, not mmv
- "" I^Triosa
CA.NOE COVE i „,,T-sfAirCRi?T-,«T-3V,
h.p Evinrude Outboard, aluminum
trailer, foajlon gas. tank. All in
654-5711
YACHT SALES
SIDNEY, B.C.
■
- --- --,1975 18' MARLIN 140 OMC
over, excellent llveaboard, open to I under 199 hrs., new camper top
any reasonable offer. Needs finish -1 Sleeper seats, anchor pak. $3,295
ing. On display AAaca Marina, 4S3'On display AAact Marine, 453 Heed
Head St., X3-M24. ]SJ.. 383- X24. __
35* DOUBLE-ENDED MOTOR-147' KETCH An6~h’alIA, As'liD^-
iboat In veilow cedar on oak, ra-'vertlsad in Pacific YKhtIng. on
built Chrysler Crown, restored in-;view Aug. 21 and 22. Van tsia
side and out, pressure water, oil AAarirM. Reeiittkallv priced to sell
'Stove, dinghy, comfortable cruiser, at $49,500.
1,75 iSC CC YAMAHA, CHOPPED, j FOR SAL^ 51 . - __...
exctiienf condition, new paint lob. STAR SLOOP. BUILT boat. Cabin plus live fish fanks,
Phone after 4:X p.m., 382-0891. ; 1973. Trallerable. Nevv 6 horsepow-135 horseeower Johnson, X horse-
Evlnru^ outboard. Registered (Power Johnson. C-License. $1,500
at. Good condition, S7,0<». Con-)firm. Phone 3 !m- 9044
Tony Burton Yacht Seles. ----
382-1928 382>4515
925 Yatei St.
McQUADES
MARINE SUPPLY LTD.
FOR YOUR SAFETY AFLOAT
Life iackets and vests, fire extin¬
guishers, enchors, rope and chain,
tiares, charts, tide books and com¬
passes and much more at
1252 Wharf St. M3-1141
/^tiN
IXLKTREAM MARINE I
"^1/
EVINRUDE Outboards
ROADRUNNER Trailers
K and C Thermoglass
HOURSTON Glasscraft
LUND
VOLVO OMC
MERC Stemdrlves
Complete
Inboard-Outboard
I Repairs
Phone Jim Dempster
Shop Foreman
i COLDSTREAM
■ MARINE LTD. _
2994 Jacklin Rd. 478-829! J] ygo
NEW and USED
ZODIAC
INFLATABLES
TOO!
IMS
NO RED TAPE
BANK FINANCING
OJkC.
OPEN ALL
WEEKEND
AT THE MARINA
1327 Beach Drive
598-3393
19' Glas Ply HT
Stock NO. 179
—Steeper teats
—Bulkhead
—140 MtrCruIser
CUTTER
Ifn Cargyle If 225 Chrysler only
MOO hours. New outboard leg com¬
mand bridge, depth sounder, com-
pau, stove, fridge, 2 showers,
dinghy end tandem trailer. $25,0M.
Consider motor home “
PAYMENT. 477-M38.
d6wn
Mercruiser,
VAN ISLE
MARINA
weekend specials
19' CUTTY
Glas Ply2 ONLY
28' CARVER F-G Comd Bridge.
This vessel has just about n
everything, Incl. shower $28,500 < WAS $12,225
X' Bridge deck cruiser — a must'
see. tine classic $8.9M
M' HOUSEBOAT, a Completely
self contained professionally
built live aboard $14.SM
Stock Noe. 145, 1S8
—140 A4arc.
—Sun top
—Full camper
-^rlne heed
*- NOW $9,995
SAVE $2,230
22' K & C
SAIL
14' fireball — Inventory In¬
cludes spinnaker and trailer
22'CATALINA — A m a r l^c'a n
modal, a super clean wall
sSf'Sw'tYJi?.
Harbour Marina. Rtgistratlen No. I
I4K22JS7. PhwW 47$-4931 tor tesi-,Pe^ these and other power end
sail boat lltHnga, Please connect
$1995
I ng. A ski ng $3..i9j.
X' KAC WEEKENDER^ ^19W,
Volvo 170 Inboard-outboard, galley,
dinette, anchor, head, paddles,
compau, lift jackets. $C5N or
offers. Call Walter Burford, Oak
Bay AV»rina. 59$-2393, 1X7 Beach
Drive. DLt14447.
VAN ISLE AAARINA CO. LTD.
Tsehum Harbour Box 21X
4S4-11X_ Sidney. B.c.
PROP REPAIR SERVICE
New and Used i
MARINE ENGINES
CHRYSLER NISSAN DIESELS {
i HARBOUR MACHINE '
PLY-GWSS 131 Erie St._^SSS t
A COMPLETE STOCK OF
FIBERGLASS
MATERIALS
PELAGIC
'73 175 KAWASAKI ENDURO. RE-
cent top end rebuit, new paint,
extras. t4X. offers. 592-4137.
343-4011.
149?' ISLANDER DEEP-V,
camper toe, SO h.e. Merc.,
, runner trailer, excellent
! tion. 477-4475.
FOR SAFETY SAKE
, Radios — CB — VHF — SSB
- - I Sounders — Flasher — Chert, Salas
full I — Sarvica ana installatl^. B4II
Road-, and Shemill Electronics .Ltd. 1
xondi-1 West Burr4lde Rd. 384-9414.
THE ACES'
ON BRIDGE
Or
IMA O. CORN JR.
T(«U C4»TA«lt
21- GLASPLY. 145 MERCURY,
many extras, Ilka new, $10,500.
Call Bob. work days, 384-4118.
nights 477-1441.
18' CAL GLASS ('741 E-Z
loader trailer, IX OMC (X hrs.).
$5500. On display Mace Marine/
453 Head St., M3-3X4.
■ With the proper c«re. the
human body will last a
lifetime” •• Dr. Kenneth
Cooper.
In a similar way. the flim¬
siest of games might be
scored if declarer follows the
right path. And he doesn't
have to run an extra five
aerobic miles to achieve suc¬
cess.
At the very least we might
observe that North and South
both bid their cards to the hilt
and somewhere beyond.
^ Clearly South's three clubs
was an overbid and North
matched South's confidence
with his jump to four spades.
However, if one bids a game,
the main idea is to make it so
the bidding was justified by
the results.
The heart seven was won
by ii^'s ace and the heart
queen went to declarer's
king. At this point, declarer
could see what was coming.
East had bid hearts and
surely had the spade ace. If
declarer led a trump to dum¬
my's jack, E3ast would win
and lead another high heart
anddeclarer would be stuck-
West's trump 10 would be
promoted to a winner and
there would be no wav to
make the hand (not that there
was much chance anvway!)-
So at trick three, aeciarer
boldly led the spade eight
and let it ride. East won the
ace and led a high heart but
now dectarer could afford to
ruff high and he won the trick
with his trump king. A low
trump was led to dummy's
jack and a club was led from
dummy. When the lucky
oueen appeared from Eftst.
tne rest was all downhill.
Declarer won the ace. drew
the remaining trumps (In this
contract, they just had to
split!), and then conceded a
club and claimed his con¬
tract.
The defense took only a
trump, a heart and a club and
declarer had his vulnerable
game.
NORTH
A J 4
V a I a 5
4 A K 18 9 4
4 4 3
19.FT. DOUBLE EAGLE. HARO-
lop, Volvo 170-270, trailer. Only 80
i hours. Price S49X.M. Phone Dun-
lean 112-746-419). 01S04A.
24' BUCCANEER
1975 as new, complete sail invento¬
ry. 9.9 Johnson alac., many extras.
Consktar small travel trailer as
trade. $12,SM. On display Mace
Marine. 433 Heed St. 383-3324.
FIBREFORM COLUMBIAN)
1974 model with less than 20 hours.
X-h.p. AAerc. CB antenna, radio,
compass, downrlgger. built-in tank,
fully equipped. AAany extras.
( FAST AND SAFE
, 17 K and C Tharmoglass Oaee-V,
13S H.P. Evinrude on Calkins
frailer. $4,0M. Phone 998-4X5.
KART
A A 75
V A Q .110 4
4 Q .1 a 4
♦ q
WEBT
A 1012
r*
♦ 73
4 K 8 7 8 S2
801'TH
A KQ$83
JKI
♦ S2
4 A J 10 9
Vulnerable: North-Snulh.
Dealer South, The bidding
2V DEEP-V HULL. FRAMED
and wired, ideal for 1 oft with
Balsa Core or k> plaster. Any
offer. 479-1203.
: SACRIFICE. 26' REINELL CRUIS-
ino sloeo with extras. $11,7X or
I offers. Don Whyte. 45 4-5832.
DICKENSONS STOVE. NEW,
' Alaska medal. $4M. Igloo crab
trap. $18. X2-3X5.
Wnt Nniih
Paw 1 ST
Pau 4a
All
paw
Seven of
<?4*/^' K AND C THERMOGLASS.
(45 H.P. Mercury, trallar, excellent
: condition. $1,8M. 454-U37.
|!97t IX-H.P. CHRYSLER~0irf-
i board. Completely rebuilt. X-day
|ouarantee^4$8-85*2. _
^75 MERC 9.8 HP $595r2>'‘TRAir-
ler wheels, rims and tires, child's
! life lacket. 458-8589.
Opening lead,
heartt.
The game was unquestiona¬
bly a lucky one, but declarer
deserves the credit for
matching daring play with
the daring bidding
SPENCER 33. INBOARD POWER,
complete sell Inventory, excellent
llveaboard, $l4,9M. On display
Mace AAarine, 453 Head St.,
383-3304.
BAREBOAT VACATION
charters, diesel yachts. Albln 25.
furnace, depth sounder, V.H.F.
radio, weekly rates. Bosun's Sea-
fun Charters. 454-4444.
X' WOOD CABIN CRUISER, 4
cylinder diesel. FWC, 370 hours.
Pressure H and C water. CB.
sounder. Otters on S174)M. Phone
595-n72 or 384-2314 evenings.
PACIFIC INDUSTtICS (1974) LTD.
NOW LOCATED AT
428 Burnside. Victoria, B.C.
_ 384-18I1 or_384.7814_ _
24’ COMMAND BRIDGE ^
REINNELL IN MERCRUISER
For Sale by Owner
1975, Low Hours
EXTRAS: P’resh water cool-
mg, sounder, fume detector,
CB radio, stand-up head,
many others. Aalcing $15,5(X),
offers welccwne.
TO VIEW 388-5907 ANYTIME
65 H.P. liVlNRUDE
Rebuilt with "New" Power Head
from Factory. Naw Equlpmant Is
12200 — Our Price to clear thesa
tnginea Is $1295 complata with con¬
trols and lank.
ALL BAY MATUNA
sidntv 454-3167
2238 Harbour Rd.
Opan 4 days, clesad Mondays
27' DIESEL CRUISER, FORD
Parsons 87 H.P. diesat. Exctilent
log Mrvice or work boat. C li¬
cence. $7,995. On display Mace
Marine, 453 Head St., X3-X24.
FAST CAT
1$ ft. Btar Cal cafansaran sail¬
boat. with trallar. in exccilant con- i
ditlon. Must sail. Offers to S12X. '
743-9119 Cobble Hill.
GREW BOATS
ON DISPLAY
OAK BAY MARINE
at the Marina
1327 Beach Dr. S96-3393
Rid With Torn
South holds:
4A75
J A Q.l 10 4
() Jl$
4q
HOUSEBOAT
On 4 cedar logs, 2 bedroom,
bathroom with showar and marine
^ -.head, living room with wall-to-wall
ALUMINIUM BOAT. 15 X' FIBERGLASS FIXED KEELland fireplace, kitchen with oil
horsepO)ver motor, trailer. $4X. sloop, cabin, cuslom built trailer,; heater, hot and cold runnii
.652-3195. jdragon design, all aluminum rlg-|wattr. Large covered porch.
im I5w‘fibre‘glass 80*17,0l|ls& Hoodjl^ woort._
IHP Evinrude, best offer. Phone '' _i i
between Send 7 p.m. 59M271._ 1)975 _ 77 , FyLL GAL-. BOATERS!
14.5 RUNABOUT, X-H.P. '74 '•.Y'. COmplet#:See our
Merc., top Shape, $300 complete. tandem
Or boat and trailer, $1M. 452 -2M3 . I <79-8739.
GRAMPIAN”*” 17 OAYSAILER- PQ®
csmpiete with sails, motor, lifi
iackets. and oars. 479-8478.
24
Nartli
2 *
24
Aaiwer: Three no-trump.
Both fuits have already been
shown and the jump to game
differentiatei between a
minimum opening and a good
one. Two no*trump or three
hearts are not baa bids, but
are not as decnpiive as the
jump to game.
Send bridge quMiionsie The Aret.
PO. Bm I33S). Dall». Troai.
7S33S. with teK-eildretkert
rtamped envelope hir repK
I npvrirhi h:*-
leeluir let
14' GLASCRAFT WITH TRAILER,
45 h.p. mercury, $i.9N or offers.
4 77-0280 . or 592-1818._
4 HORSEPOWER “meVclT^
kicker with tank, nice condition.
$173. 385-SX5.
BOAT LETTERING AND SIGNS
by John, all modern varieties.
382-4X7.
1973 24' TOLLYCRAFT. 2X H.P.
F.W.C. Chrysler, 375 hours. Loaded
with optjons. $25,000. 478-3835.
16' FIBREGLASS CANOE, LIKE
new, includes car roof rack and 2
paddles, asking $280 . 382-X39.
40 HORSE THUNDERBIRD MEia-
cury, loog-sha#t, alactrlc controls,
$325. 592-4470.
WANTED: 10 OR 12 FOOT ALU-
mlnum cartop boat. 479-9245.
- . - . SALE. ANCHOVIES
and Htrring Strips SOc par pack-
aqe. Sold W the case. 4S4-5M1,
452-1512.
... ... .. large display of apoli-
trallar, (ancei. plumbing and electrical
supplies.
S. J. PEDEN LTD.
2855 (3utsnal St. 3M-3444
27' EX NAVY
tagna rigged, i
boat $2800. On display Mace
AAarine. 453 Head St.. 383-3384.
P AC E S H I P . FULLY
tqulppad, 3 sails, outboard, ate.
Immedlata sale. sio,7X. 479-72N.
14' BAYLINER, 70 HORSE JOHN-
son. Road Runner trallar. rgnvas
top. 478-4478..
24' THUNDERBIRD. FULLY
aquippad tor racing or cruitino.
$4,000. 746-55X after 4 P.m.
X' DOUBLE ENDER, FISH,
cruise or liva-a-board. Heads, gai-
Ity. shore power. Bargain at
$4,5C0. Devs 452-1041, avenings
452-1049.
35' CHRIS-CRAFT CONSTELLA-
tIon. Twin 237 V-8s. radio-
talaphena, soundtr, starao, auto¬
matic Pilot, dinghy, ate. $21,900
with recant survey. 385-53X.
FISH, SKI OR CRUISE. 17' is¬
lander with camper top. 79 and 9.9
alec, start Chrysler outboards. Ex¬
cellent condition, $3300. 453-3099.
ir FIBREGLASS CANOE, ,
iv« gallon XXX entifouling paint.
tX. X3-443I. ’•* '
_;14' FRONTEIRSAAAN FIBERG-
txs; canoe, one year old with pad-
- - dies, life Iackets, etc. $200.
385-S33S.
1975 CATALINA 27 FIBERGLASS * V ^ M
sloop, fully equipped for cruising, Evinrude. completely overhauled.
Immaculate, $15,900. 471-2449. ! On
-- ■ - ■■ ' -[display AAaca AAarine, 453 Head
25' CHRIS CRAFT CAVALIER, St., 383-3324.
boalhousa kept.'-
998-77X or N4-i9S5.
MERC. 4X, GAS
KYAK FIBREGLASS FRON-
ttertman, with spray cover, pad-
dla, $200 or bast offer. 999-4048,
KINGFISHER FG SLOOP, 5
sails, boom tant, extras. 744-7831
Duncan.
(1 ONLY)
Stock No. IX
-IN MERC 1-0
—AAarine Head
—Galley
—OInnette
—Command Bridge
REG. $16,095 "NOW $12,995
SAVE $3,100
US.
Coast Guard
USES
GLAS PLYS
WHY DON'T
YOl!!!
PRE-OWNED
18' Starcraft Cutty
—Marina head
—Bottom paint
-Full canvas tope
—1» 1.0.
(Coiwood)
ONLY $5,995
18' HOURSTON
—145 1.0.
—Stand-up Camper
—Hardtop
—Bottom paint
ONLY $7695
(Coiwood)
14' K & C Pkg.
—Trailer
-SO H.P. O.B.
—Slaapar Seats
$1395
(Pandora)
Bank of B.C.
10 Year
Financing O.A.C.
We Toke Campers
Cars, Trucks etc.
on Trode!
"We will match or
better any
K & C Deal"
WESTPORT
YACHTS
Located off Pat Bay Hwy., near
Swartz Bay Ferry Terminal
SAIL
17' Columbia, 24' Shark, 24' Raw-
son. 24' Relnall, X' Rawson. 35'
Sloop, 39' Motor Sailer, 40' Garden
Ketch. 44' Motor Seller. X’ Ketch.
PLUS
VIKING 33 "DISTANT DRUM¬
MER" — recently featured In PA¬
CIFIC YACHTING. Excellent rac¬
ing career including Pacific
Northwest one ton championship
plus numerous other wins over last
two years. AAany extras make for
ideal cruising boat for six.
Asking $44,000
POWER
Our list of power boats covers
everything from 19' to X' and
pricad from $3000 to $159,000. Wa
have something for everyone. Call
us for informafion.
WESTPORT
MARINA
X7S Tryon Road, Sidney 4S4-58X
BOSUN'S
YACHT
BROKERAGE
Faaturaa an axtansiva collactlon of
excallam quality Boats including: .
POWER
704 31' DIESEL Trawler, sleeps 4,
Dual steering, recent survey,
fully equipped for cruising,
livs aboard. $37,300
4$4 X' MONK, dssigntd Tri^s^
cruiser, Caferplllsr Diesel,
1973 . Comnmad Bridge. $42,500
459 21' LAND 8. SEA Craft, fibre-
glass, Command bridge, sleeps
/. H I, C shower, O.M.C. 1-0.
$2 A 500
698 27' CHRIS CRAFT Cavstier.
New engine, clean and well
equipped. $16,500
643 24' FIBERFORM "BAHA".
1975 fibreglass. Loaded $14,500
SAIL
X' HUNTINGFORD Lancer,
sister to Ukrenitn AAagIc. 3
month delivery from Van¬
couver at $31,700. Demo at
our dock $39,300, Sall-away
$21,000. Phona for dafalls.
S- 7 0 3 2 2 ' COLUMBIA Fully
aquippad $7,500
1943 "FIFER" motor sailor. X
tons, Gsrdnar Dissal, Pas-
sagemaker. $99,900
S-701 23' VENTURE of NEW-
PORT. New end fully
equips. Treiler $t.1M
S -141 49' YAWL, Porpoise detion.
Live eboerd tSSMJO
Brokers JIM SQUIRE and BOB
BENTHAM will auitt YOU In your
seiaction, we attend to Inspections,
Financing end Documentation.
DON OMLID offars AAarine advice.
BOSUN'S MARINA
EXECUTIVE
YACHTS ■
Now in Stock
The AM new 28'
Executive
—Choice of power
and colors
-Pressure hot water
—Shower
—Rolrigeration
—Shore power
Stove with oven
---2 cabins
—Bimini top
—I'li^ih deck
--Stainless steel rails
-Swimgrid
—Drapes and summer
Fcreens
30' & 33' Models
Also
on Display
A Boot for Every
Budget at
MERCURY
ITARINE
385-1457
800 clovI':rdale
OPEN FRI. NITES ’til 9
Norwood Marine Ltd.
385-1451
$ 23 Pendore
JET SKI BOAT. COUGAR HULL,
454, and trallar, custom parts and
accasaorles, $4900 or trada.
45S-80$0.
IT STEURY FIBERGLASS TRI-
hull. Pull galley end heed. Sleeps
4. X hours on 18S AAercruISfr. New
Cenvee and oeint. Offars li54040.
WANTED: USED
age d J)eets. 3$3-l640.
SAILAWAY!
ON DISPLAY
BRAND NEW
If WINDROSE. SIMM lour. OI.
nette, large cabin, sleek end
fast, traliarabia. Main and lib
sails. New 4 h.p. Johnson O.B.
SAILAWAY PRICE $4895
X' CATALINA. sieeo$ four. Gal¬
ley, dinette, marine heed, main
and jib sails, naw 6 h.p. John¬
son, traliarabia. thousands on
the water.
SAILAWAY PRICE $8595
22' TANZER. Sleeps four. Galley,
dinette, marine heed, main and
lib Mils, new 4 h.p. Johneon,
fixed keel model. The ultlmala
in quality.
SAILAWAY PRICE $W.30l
SAILAWAY PRICES INCLUDE
COMMISSIONING end ON-THE
WATER DELIVEY
Bob Whyte Marine
_ SALES AND SERVICE
2246 Harbour 454-4421
sail the classic staam tug, Sm
S wall which has baen our homa for
5 vaars, SS'xX'. all machkiKy has
baen removed end conversion to i
houseixtat Is 90 per cent complete.
2 bedroomat alactrlc kitchen, full
bathroom, dining area, living room
with flreplece, full head room
basement, oil heat, 3,000 gallon
rlor panellinp to your own taste.
$28,000. Roy Braithwalta, Cowlchan
Bay Post OHica, 748-2778 or
453-4377 after 4.
SAANICH LUMBER YARD
Has In stock: Oak, Pina, Ash,
Teak, Mahogany, Cedar (yellow
and red), lumber end veneers.
18 PLY F.G. SAILBOAT, t
dec. sells. $2200. On disolev f
Marine, 4g Heed St., 183-X24.
1947 5 H.P. JOHNSON FISHING
motor. 1 diving tank and 1 regu¬
lator. 478-9910.
FOR SALE 13’-^' INFLATABLE
1^' FIBREGLASS CRUISER
Htni trailer, sleeps 2 with heed,
Excellent buy, $4200. 3544 Redwood.
19' DAYCRUISER. SWAP FOR
truck and camper or van "
i4J)00. 479-4490.
2f COMBINATION TROLLER
and cod boat. "B'< Licence. $7,000
cash. 244-9177.
1973 MERC W-HORSEPOWER
o'jtboard. with controls and tank.
$1,500. 593-7258.
1974 BAYFIELD 25 SAILBOAT, 3
sails, Diesel engine, tl4.3X. Phone
454-4344.
MONEY MAKER — 8 ' PRAM-
type fiberglass dingy mold. $175.
454-34$7 evenings.
12' CLINKER FOR SALE. $400.
Phone after S p.m., 592-1924.
SIDNEY MARINE
X' TROJAN Sportsmen
»' CHRIS Sea SkiH
34' EX-FISHBOAT, ditsel
24' CHRIS Cavalier
24' PORTA Cruiser
24' FIBERFORM Bela
25' CHRIS Cavelier
24' BARTENDER
25' ALBIN
22' ARTCRAFT
24' RANGER
2270 Harbour Rd.
$51,900
$24,900
$14,900
$13,900
$14,400
$15,900
$11,900
$8,7X
$I9.9X
$5,500
$14,500
454-5591
DUNCAN
BOATLAND
GRAND
OPENING
Of our New Location
VICTORIA
RV CENTRE
ON
Goldstream Ave.
Chock our Display Ads
in thia
weekend's sportp
nections—FRI., SAT,
and SUN.
For Many BOATLAND
BARGAINS
at
VANCOUVER ISLAND'S
OUTSTANDING BOAT CENTRE
746-4158
ONE ONLY
NEW PACESHIP 24 SLOOP
JUST ARRIVED THIS WEEK
Full cruising and eafaty equipped,
3 sells, anchor and cable, fira ax-
tingulthar, stove end IS hp electric
start 0-8 motor. Ready to go. At
old price $X,72t.
COVE YACHTS (1974) Ltd.
AMpie Bey, R.R. 1, Duncan,
74841X
, SURPER 24
ChKk and compare the quality.
The choice of the experienced end
professional boatman. Hand-laid fl-
berglaaa. stainless steel fastenings.
Teak Interior, Balsa<ored decks,
and sall-away equipment. Unbeata¬
ble performance at see. Call Dick
Chudley.
RFC MARINE LTD., SIDNEY
454-5591 • 2278 Harbour Rd.
197S REINELL COAAMANO
bridge, very low hours, fully
loaded, with d^h sounder, CB
radio, stereo compass, anchor pac.
new bottom paint. Must tall Im¬
mediately, at 513,900. Phone Bob
Barker, Oak Bay Marlin Salas
and Service. 99$-3393.
1973 14' CAL-GLASS TRI HULL,
Sleeperette seats, welk through
windshield, bow seats, 8-track
I stereo ang spatdomatar. X h.p.
I Mercury. Road Runner trailer, like
new, $3.995. Phone 494-5454.
HEAVILY BUILT X' CRUISER'
r>ew Merc, power f.w.c. plus many
many extras. Ideal for the tisher-
man, $4500. On display Maca
AAarina, 453 Head St., 383-3324.
1974 BAYLINER SKAOIT 22'4''.
Iti OMC. 210 hours, gailsy, head,
C.B. radio, anchor pack, alms 4.
Excellent condition, boathouse
kept, $8995. 4^127 after 4:M p.m.
OUTSTANDING SMALL YACHT
23* reclng<rulslng sloop "Te-
toosh". C end C designed, pace-
ship built, sxtenslve Inventory,
best offer. S92-089S._
{427 CUBIC INCH CHEV. POW-
ered silver and rad metal (lake
HONDO $kl boat. Loaded with
extras, con>es with custom trailer.
112-743-5122. _
22' FIBREFORM. 149 MERC.,
low hours, sounder, compass, ice
box, end geliy pek. $8998. On dis¬
play Mace Marine, 413 Heed St.,
X3-3324. _
SACRIFICE SALE, OWNER MOV-
Ing. Must *11 Immediately 40'
Cruiser "Nani LI" SX.SflO. Includ¬
ing one veer's moorage. Ceil
452-1181 or 452-3170.
CHEOY Lee 33' sKmp $39,000
CATALINA 27' $IOOP $14,7X
CORONADO 25' 3 sells $10,800
CAL X, 3 sails $5,250
ALCON 29' housemt $15,900
.. COVE YACH1T()974) Ltd.
AAeple Bey, R. R. i Duncan,
748-81X
islander X - "PAX" 30'
M brag less aloop, compietely
wiulpped for racing end cruising.
E>«»ms include: custom soar, sells
by Watts, alactronics. pulpits and
or*^477*30X *‘'^^**'
CENTRAL BOAT
USTING SEIR'VICE
Buyers, sellers. I will put
you together. 383-1640.
1975 24 FT. REINELL HARDTOP
~ like new — low hours FWC
— trim tabs — dMth sounder —
dual baneriea — full gaiiay —
down riggers — CB radio — Prica
$12,900. 748-9949 Duncan.
18' SKI JET BOAT. SIDEWINDER
hull, blut and silvtr metallic, 455
Olds, Berkley let. complete . with
treiler and cover, only 32 hours,
$5995. Phone 746-69X after 6 p.m.
MUST SELL THIS WEEK. If'
cabin boat, Mbergiass over ply¬
wood. Needs lots of work. With or
without 35 h.p. Evinrude. Best
offer takes. 479-8454.
14' SAILBOAT AND TRAILER,
fibreglass International 4X, alumi¬
num mast, 3 Dacron sails. $900 or
bast offer. X5-40M.
PACESHIP X, AS NEW, TRA1L-
sr and ell gear Inc. $4495. On
display Mace Marina, 4X Haad
St.. X3-3334.
2 7 FT. SAILBOAT, GAFF
rifged, ax-navy whealar with out¬
board auxiliary, $1275 firm.
743^119 CoIXIe Hill.
SAILBOAT COMPLETE WITH
balls, centra board,d^tre ruddtr.
completaly Hgged. or cloaaet
effar. 3$3-3447.
28' COLUMBIA, EXCELLENT
crulsng sloop, six sells, dissal aux¬
iliary, dual water tanks. $17,500,
offers. 478-0003.
TRANSFERRED, MUST SELL, 18'
fibresitss deep see. sleeoer seats,
carpet, camper top, Merc, power,
910 McClure. 38S-5494.
14' GLASSCRAFT, 40-H.P. JOHN-
eon electric. Roadrunner trailer,
excellent condition. $1700 or oftera.
593-38a3.
FIREBA4.L-16' TRAPEZE-TYPE
sailing dingy with trallar. 454-3487.
avenings.
CANOE, 14' FIBERGLASS, NEAR
new. With life iackets and paddits.
$225. 478-9X1.
#2'—1969 GLASTRON. 160 H.P.
AAercury. walk-thru windshield,
sleeps 4, seats 4, good condition.
SacrHice, $4,800. 477^)5.
MUST SELL 22' K-C FLYBRIDGE
cruiser, heed, galley, cuddy cabin,
dinette, 215 h.p. 2>0 Volvo leg.
extras. $9,9X. 454-4157.
21' STARCRAFT ('74) 170 VOLVO
1-0., F.W.C. Plus E-Z loadtr trall¬
ar, $10,900. On display Maca
Marina, 453 Haad St. 313-3X4.
28', NICE INTERIOR, NEEDS
work, as Is, $5J)00 or bast offar.
478-XI9.
12Vj' AVON INFLATABLE BOAT
argo^t^«il9r. $1,400 or best offer.
AAAST
Aluminum. X'. spreaders,
track. 595-X19.
14’.^' COUGArt SKI BOAT, IX
AAerc with power trim. 112-749-3245.
BS
AIRCRAFT
LEASE, TRADE, SELL,
FINANCE
1974 Cessna 210 Centurlan It ~
fully equipped, 400 avionics, DME.
auto pitot. Beautiful, fast, iHush —
the ultimate single engine air-
plent. New. TT X hours. 1974
Cessna 182 Skyland, 210 hours
TTAE. Dual 300 Nav-Com. digital
ADF transponder MB, glide slope,
auto pilot, B6T, flight hour re¬
corder. dual controls, tong range
fuel, strotM lights, k^ator baacon,
articulating front seats, Oeluxt
courtasy option and much more.
Cell Newell Morrison, Victoria
383-8211. or Abbotsford Air Ser-
vlces Ltd.. Abbotsford. iX-4877.
FOR SALE: 75 CESSNA )X CDM-
muter, low time. goM price, tax
fTM. Or for rent tX per hour wet.
477-9424.
n SPORTING GOODS
SPANISH 13-GAUGE DOUBLE,
$225. Texan shot shell retoader. 12
and 2l>-g8uge compontnts. $X.
477-5406.
HANGLIDER
75 Muller 18' Henglider. $350 In-
eludes professional laesons.
3$4-8736 or 743-2$33.
REMINGTON RIFLE MODEL 722.
300 Savaga, new Tesco kopc with
cesc end shells. Excellent .':ondi-
tion $145.X 3t4-4483.
14' 6IRDMAN HANG-GLIDER
tow kite, complete with floats, re¬
leases, tow line end helmet. Ex¬
cellent condition. 477-4IX.
1
V
40 SD»ilf Colonist Virtnria. B.C , Sunday, Auguat 22, 1916
TODAY’S CBOSSWOSD PUZZLE
UNITED Feature Syndicate
ACROSS
1 Mates:
Slang
a Boy masts
gtrl
10 Darting
movement
14 Burning
15 Conception
16 Assistant
17 Stogie
16.
law:
Relatives
20 Put in a
locker
7 1 Bowling
alley trough
22—up:
Count
23 Gain sktil
2S Police
statistics
27 Applied a
covering
30 Water body
31 "1 smelt a
32 Metric unit
34Endfngwith
air or motor
36 Tallin man
40 Jacob a
son s
namesakes
42 Shadow box
^ 43 Remained
unchanged
45 Cut into
cubes
47 Noun
suffixes
46 Globular
object
50 Mercy
52 Beggar's
request
56 More filmy
57 Finnish port
58 .jacket
60 Violent
anger
63 Subway
device
65 Ultimate
66 "Woe
67 Old Greek
com
68 Saint.
Indians
69 Adroit
70 Necessity
7 1 Range crest
UHEinnin Kciaia uQa
nnidou Hai'juciuu
BDnnniann iina
44 V
patrons
10 Advanced
11 Catalogues
12 Imbecile
i3Encamps
19Usedpoor
judgment 46
21 Chalice
24 The works 49
26 Head
appendages 51
27 Hematite
and bauxite 52
28 Enormous
29 Evil spirit
33 Paddy: 2
words
35 Steer s
milieu: 2
words
36 Kind of
brandy
37 Gaelic
language
S3k
54 E
55 C
I
59 F
61 1
•62<
64 F
By R. A. POWER
W T\-. 8TEBEO. fUDIO
SALES and SERVICE
fml
uy
1
Sll
1 _J
1IS*2435
1821 COOK
WE RENT
COLOR
OR BLACK/WWle TV's
99 GROCERIES. MEAT
and P RODtCE
LOCAL HONCV^'lN HALF GAL
Ion iar only $4.90 or 4 lart $17.00.
(7$c lb.) Phono 050*1310 not Sun
Butler
BuUerBrolhe n
TV RENTALS
1720 DOUGLAS STREET
385-3832
RENT
BRAND NEW TV :
FAia DEAL SERVICE LTD. |
AAMiorcaro Malnitnanca Servica '
tor Admiral and Maonavox
Tilllcum (at Burnsida)
3IS.JIM
OKANAGAN PEACHES, PREE»-
tona. traa ripaned, laroa, iulcv.
Paara, plums, appias. Nonstop
from orchard. Dativared. 477-8201.
‘CULL POTATOES* $2- PER 100
pound. MIcholt Brothari. 3015 Is¬
land Vlaw Road.
FARLY’aPPLE^ LE^cbUTEAU
Farms, 304 Walton praci. off Old'
field 658-5888.
FRESH NEW CROP RAW
honey, your contalnari 658-8319 net
Sundays.
BLUEBERRIES *65C” A 'p’oUND
advance order for guaranlaad
freshna$9. 386-0934.
1t:0 MlM'!:i,l.\N/.t)t S
Fr)R sAi.r.
E 4 TOrfS
MtfIREHOUSE
STORE
HOME
FURNISHINGS
AT BUDGET
SAVING PRICES
9i SPORTINO GOODS
RIFLES — Shultt-Larsan. .308
Norma AAao. 4X, $419; Brown¬
ing .270, 4X. $325; Win. .3»
mae., $290; BSA, .308, 2x7,
sm.- wtatharbv 300 Mag., 4X,
$525; Parkar Halt .343. 4X. $210;
Rem. X-06, 3x9, $240; Savaga
301. $220; marlin .35. 1x4.
$240; Snolguns — Browning
20G, Auto.. $325; Ram. 12G
Pump M-F. BUS, $200: Higgins
120, Auto, $140: Win. pump
130. $140: Stavans 12G. Obla.,
8100; Pistols -> Rugar .44,
Parc. Stainless, $190: S-W, 357
CASED, $360: Browning 9
mm., 1269: P38 9 mm, $195;
Ammo. 9 mm. Surp. $9 box.
USE OUR FREE LAY-A-WAY
WE BUY GUNS FOR CASH
130? BROAD 385-3429
single shot shotguns from $39.95:
30-X Winchesters from $109.95; 303
Huntlnq Rifles from $^.95; 308
cal. from $69.95—X:06 Cal. from
$89.95.
DON’T WATT
Pick UP your licence — tags —
ammunition NOW
Also!
Export Qunsmithlng at raasonabla
rates
Ramtmbar!
New .303 military Ammo, only
$3.95 box
(Sight In Now)
9S CAMEBA5. SUPPUBS
AND PHOTO FINI SHING
WE'RE
EXPANDING
so AS TO
SERVE YOU BETTER
SORRY FOR THE
INCONVENIENCE
BUSINESS
AS USUAL
Bill's Photo Supply
liiT'J Douglas ;;83-7it:;j
Used CaiKMi FI System
EXCEPTIONAL BUY - with 35'
mm Ians, 50 mm 1.4 Ians, 135 mm
lens, 300 mm Ians, 3 finders, auto,
flash and morel
CITY PHOTO
1227 GOV’T 385-5(133
r URMTURE
MATTRESSES
WHY NOT
ouy your sprinq filled mattress di¬
rectly Irom our factory, good guai-
Ity af a raasonabla orlca.
a-INCH LATEX
FOAM RUBBER (AM Sites)
oosture zorw support, clean, hy-
genic, doesn't sag or lump. 3'3"
$109: 4'a'-. 8139: Queen. $179.
IWIMEDIXTE DELIVERY
GREGG FURNITURE
2300 Douglas 388-7365
YASHICAMAT.120 WITH LIGHT
meter, $45 with guarantee.
385-5265.
RANGES. STOVES
and FURNACES
BUY-SELL-TRADE
S74 Yetee St. 383-2423
BILLIARD TABI^S
SHUFFLE BOARDS
SUPPLIES
NOW AVAILABLE
The all-new Texaco oil furnace
with the revoiutktnary flame reten¬
tion head, proven savings up to 25
per cant In fuel consumption.
HarkntH Fuat, 384*9381. ask for
Ralph Smith or Stave Brown.
AIRCO DOWNF'lOW~FURNACE
Plus duct and outlet, 104X100 BTU.
used only 6 months. $200 . 384-8736.
LEONARD E
near new $350.
VILAS
GENUINE
VILAS FURNITURE
WE SHIP
Anywhere in B.C.
Brochure on Request
CONTINENTAL
FURNITURE
716 Johnson St. 38G-24 j8
MOVING. QUALITY HOUSEHOLD i
furniture and appliancas. Uphol-t
stared chesterfield and 2 matching'
chairs. Large upholstered chair
and matching ottoman. Black nau-;
gahyde chastarfiaid and matching',
chatr. Piano, RCA XLIOO Color,
Tv, Wool Oriental dasion rugs,
custom lined drwoes. Bunk beds.
Dressers. Desk. King sized bed.
Etc. 477-0471, 4001 Hollvdene (13
' tilt 6 Sat., Sun.).
COLORTRON
RENTS
Rent a 20" or 26" color TV by tha
week or month. Lorvger term
'leases also available. Sama day
' delivery.
COLORTRON
3150 Harriet 383-9113
Rent or Own
FROM
CITY centre tv
OPEN 10 A.M. - 10 P.M,
6 DAYS A WEEK
3970 Shelbourne 477-6971
, to K Anart In the Mall i
DELUXE 26" COLOR TV. lOl'
per cant solid state with push but¬
ton automatic fine turning end
color lock. Full console to the floor
cabinet style. Fully guaranteed 1
year all parts and labor and 2
! years on the black matrix picture
, tube. Will arrange financing,
! brand new, good value for $695.
The Traders. Phone 592-3647.
TV AND STEREO
CLEARANCE
All 1976 models have to be sold.
Come in and buy at low prices.
Electron TV Sales and Service. 100
Bu rnside W. 383-5432.
we ARE NOW CLEARING^buT
all our 1976 models to make
room for 1977 models, stereos,
components and colour TVs.'
Big savings.
ATLAS STEREO AND TV
763 Fort S.t. _ 385-271?
20" COLOR TV, BRANo'nFwT 100
oer cent solid state with new in¬
line Picture tube. Full factory war¬
ranty and 1 year In homt serivea.
$450. FINANCING CAN BE AR¬
RANGED. The Traders. Phone
592-3647.
TbSHtBA“C0L0UR'TErEV15F0N,
5 months old, $400. Pioneer SX53S
amp and tuner. Pioneer turntable
' and 2 Unitron speakers. $550 or
offers. 382-5039. _
TEAC 2300-S, REEL-TO-REEL
tape recorder, like new. retail list,
' $7*0, sacrifice $475. Two STR T-10
: stereo speakers, tike new, retail
i list $650, sacrifice, $450. 479-6458.
C.B. RADIOS
Sales and Servica. BALL A SHE-
I MILT Eioctronics Ltd., I wesi
Burnside Rd. — 386 9414.
! c’ELESTlbN~bTfT^~6r’sTUD7b
monitors. The British recording In¬
dustries standard. AAust sell $700. i
Ken at 3854540 or 385-1448.
TECHNICS^By' PANASONIC’ SL’-!
HOOA Professional turntable. Com-'
pleta with ADC-XLM cartridge.
Asking $490. As new. 595-2617.
ONE pfONEE’^RYCElvERToNE
Garrard turnfable. 4 Unitron
soeakers. excellent condition, $600.
383-0733.
STEREO'FOR’SALEr r»~WA tY
remote control amp, spaakers.
turntable, 1 month old, asking
SI200 . 478-2835, 478-7348.
SANSUI TU-95W Tu’nER, BRAND
new also Studiotont 40 watt re¬
ceiver, Lenco transcription turnta-
, tie. 382-7021.
COMPLETE H'lGH’buALjTY’s’Vs-
lem, whole or pari, sacrifice.
3 86-3706. _
'76 STEREO, 4 SPEAKERS,
turntable, tuner, amplifier. $ 1000 .
Ne w $1500. 478-365 4. _
1973 ELECTROHOME 19" POR'TA-
bie black and white instant-on tele-
• ‘fk.
749 View St.
Buffer
ButfwBIrotfMre
FOR MAYTAG
1720 DOUGLAS STREET
:a5-3832
C. TAYLER
HOME APPLIANCE LTD.
SALE
MAYTAG
CLEARANCE
707 JOHNSON _ 383-3281
"KILSHAWS
1115 Pon St.
AUCTIONS
Friday at 7:00
Appraisals
tor
insurance and Salt
PURPOSES
384-6441
MlSCEUANEOf'R
FOR SALE
AUGUST SALE
SPECIAL
SAVINGS
Make your
own deal on
choice of
lawn &
garden
equipment
Chrysler
Boats &
Motors Also
Drastically
reduced
Trades &
consignments
Welcomed -
Your Credit is
good here
yiaoBA
AWNMO^
MlRCEUJlNFOI*«
FOB 8.4LE
THE TR.ADERS
MIM’EIJji.VKOf S
.RALE
.MfSf KI.LANPlOl S
r OK SM.K
OPENING SPEED
Announce¬
ment
RAWLINGS
Tub'N'Tops
Used Merchandise
McClary 10 cu. fl. ujirlKhi.
froezpr, as new. u;>wl
fridKP in working condition,
$29.95: grpen daver^xirt with
arms and bedding box.
I $59.95: WealinRhou.sp 7 cu. j
,11. Harvp.st gold freezer only:
,$169.95; high back ronleni-;
porary .sofa and Chair, good
, condition. $175.
/-/M /NryrrN -r^/»r Vlcloria’s fine.sl and newest
COLORED Tv S bathroom shop featuriny the
.Maqnav’ox 20" rtmoie con- latest in plumbing fixlures
trols. only $4fW w-ith ai)- accessories and bath dis- ezz rv -j ‘ 30'1 oO" 7 i
pnned color TV trade-in;, plays. We also carry the UQVId Jo4-OZ/4
Admiral 20" 100 per cent most complete .stock of
solid state portable. $:T^,9fi:' plumbing part.s . on Van-
good selection of 26" console ■ corner Island, also healing
tnodel Admiral color TVs. and wiring supplies and
clearing as low as $599.95 General Electric Appli-
with appnwed color TV ances.
trade. RawUng.s Tub’N'Tap*
625 Hillside Ave. .188-7.111
QUEEN
Washers from $368
; 2-YEAR GUARANTEE ON ABSO-
BEFORE YOU BUY
ANY FURNITURE — Como m
ond comoore our ovorvdtv low.
low, warohouM prlcM.
ACTIVE
FURNITURE
Open Nightly 'til 9
Phone .188-6264
715 KinJayson
Interesting
AUCTIONS
FRIDAY - SUNDAY
KILSHAWS
1115 Fort St.
and
Whippletree
1.1 mi. .South of Duncan)
Kilshaws o|>en daily for re¬
ception and display of good
furnishings
WHIPPLETREi: PREVIEW
Friday and Sat. flO-5 p.m.>
384-6441 Duncan 748-1100
Hundreds
of
ITEMS
AUCTION
GALLERY
C. TAYLER
HOME APPLIANCES LTD.
MAYTAG
2 million ownors con't bt wrong
707 JOHNSON 383-5ei
THE SHY^ioLET
34SD QUADRA
SUMMER
CLEARAAfCE SALE
W( buy. Mil Of consign. Apprsig.
?!?. Jy f'l ESTATF
SALES pnd LIQUIDATION SALES.
Immedlsic pickup of your goods
All Items sold seme w*«k nf
pickup NO WAITiNGI We heve
our own trucks.
VICTORIA
966 YATES STREET 316-8441
AMANA
MICROWAVE
DEMONSTRATIONS
Every^i. 6-9 P.M. Sat. 10-4
■Major Appliancea apd car¬
pet at contractor prices
We soil the best beceuse we ec-
cept only the very best of good
qualify (Mhionable noerly new lad- McDONALDS STipPf V
ies' clothing. FALL and WINTER ,
conslgnmenfs accepted now. Phone < i L,!D.
*"”5 ™ Rd; E. -SSSaiTir,
(ilosed AAondeys
THE SHY VIOLET
TENT TRAILER. NEW~SPARE
tire and 4" loom mattrassas. 1973
Honda 350 Twin, helmet and man¬
ual, like new. Rebuilt '57 283. cam
and 4-barrei. S-soeed standard. 289
with 3-spaM standard. Aden's
i0-$peed bike, used twice. Pord
chrome wheels. 14 and 15". i965
Ford Fairlane waoon, new tires,
brikes. shocks and axhaust.
Evef^F'— -
^^j^lng must oo cheap.'
Johnson
386-8.138
BARGAIN
ANNEX
{ _
1
iniJ
Ji!
‘ 385-2435
Leaving ^Sr-^^vei^hing must
go. Small power tools: Garden
equipment; kitchen utensils and
dishes; swivel office chair; student
desk: portable sewing machine: B
and W TV; unpaintad oine bureau
ena nightstand; aooHancas: many
misc- items. FVom 10 a.m. Satur¬
day and Sunday. 140 St. Giles, left
off Trans-Canade on Portage Inlet.
GIGANTIC GAILXGK 5v\I.K
AT REAR OF
1222 Gl^STONE
Pfidges, beds, stoves, boov^
paints. children's lawn swines.
carpets, building
'Tidtef'als. also garden tools,
adul^ end children's bikes,
laundry wash tubs (almost new),
antique organ, plus many, many
more items. Dealers welcome
Open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday 18
a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday.
U»Mm
Fmitut
\ Str^Knlti
M Ml (1. H>4M
Le? US strip your (furniture of all
USED
MOVING IMMEDIATELY
prices slashed. Oak Buffet, oak > Paint and varnT^
settee, chest of drawers, Traver- _ jwonoav
tine coffee table, end table, 4 sin- . INSIDER"
gie and one king size beds com- ya la 30*o on fuel bills
pleto. Tools, dishes, 10 speed biev-, — do-it-yourself storm
cie and assorted household items. '*''h<tow kits with adhesive-backed
456-5476 . 9190 Ardmore Dr., Sidney, '’‘"y]. trim. A NEW
10-4 Sal.-Sun. -ITEM — ASK FO" -
714 Market Street
Used Building materials from the
ground up. Tues. thru Sat. 10-6
384-3614.
ONE U$ED ALLIS CHALMERS' 10
h.p. garden tractor in good rondi-
tion, asking $650. One used factory
built twowvhaei trailer with flat
dack, ideal tor hauling garden
equipment or boats, etc. Asking
$250. One used Allis Chalmers 1947
model G tractor with front mount,
ed plow. Asking $500. Phone
656-6056 after 5 R.m.
used' OVERHEAD^ "complete
garage door, I'x6'6". 1 comblna-
lion aluminum door. 33"x80", right
hand. I new combination white
door, safety glass. 36"x84", left
hand. 1 new bitold classic door.
36"xa0", 4 new wood tramtd win¬
dows. 4'^’. 595-1106. _
MOVING: PLANTS. CACTI,
palms. Robarts stareo reel to reel
tape recorder $100. 't site Suzuki
violin bow and caM. Odds and
ends. 386-6915.
S U ITA 8 L E FOR STUDENT
apartment, 34" range, fridge, porta¬
ble counter with shelves, table, 3
chairs. 3 single beds, 4 drawer
desk, all for $1 75. 477-5158. _ I
20" WHITE ENTERPRISE
Stove, $300. 11 cu. ft, white.
A6cClarv fridge, $225. Both 18
months old. Immaculate condition
S98.5e66. _
SOLID WALNUT BOOKSHELF“oR
China cabinet (Glass door) $50.
Pair of lamps,$20 pair o4 oc-
cbslof^i chairs. W. 478^52^
HOT WATER* HEaYiNG 'uNi't-
boiler, 250 gallon oil lank, drcuiat-
ing pump, oil burner. Reasonable
offer. 382-6482.
USED
, Hidp-a-beda. various colors
Jrfim $149.95
Spctional Suite $ 79.95
Step tables j ]5.88
Love seats, gold, matching
pr.. each $169.95
Recliner. gold $ 79.95
Recliner, Oogswell. Rust
$ 39.95
Single box spring and
mattress $ 69.95
Rocker. Recliner, green
vinyl $149.95
Bedroom suite. 7 yice.. while
and mattress $239.95
4’6” Bed. complete with
radio headboard $ 79.95
Sofa and chair, green $ 99.95
Kitchen suite, 6 chairs
$ 79.95
Comer love seat $ 49.95
Buffet and Hutch. >)eautiful
older type, M*a)nut $.149.95
Table lamps, from $ 16.88
Trade-Ins Accepted
Come in and browse around
I'sed articles juirchased
FREE DELIVERY
A DIVISION OF
STANDARD FURNITURE
AT INSIDER
SALE; HOCKEY SKATES AND 2105 DoiglSs!^^il}^''460^'’^nlic4'
Dodl. sizo 5. siz« 6 S4-$7. Goalie Nanaimo. Open 6 davs oar week
_ A- sKafes size 9 $40: Ladies' (igurei ~
Green Hide-a-bed $ 79.9o skates size 9 SIO: Aquarium com-L carpet CLEARANCE
Davpnnrti-f S 1b *^0 Walnut color glass front! ^ carpet ends
uavenpon $ .W.SU ^utch $»; 2 wood planes ?b"- 2 " ! - 23'xl3'. 20*L off reqular
Matching soft, droti arm blades. One Skli saw $15; 8515 •'JJt Rfica, cash and carry
level seal and chair $189.95, • -- ,flower and Skloner, Victoria Wmi
Pana^onir aniar nnria HEAVY-DUTY FLOOR POLISH-' 382.il«, - ' Y'Pori. WMl.
18 Panasonic color poria- , 35 , unntftrooa 'YPe«i-it. --- -
bip JIHS.OO i »■. SSS; K 0 d« $ 10 ; ! Mr- ’ WIND-UP CAMPER JACKS.
26" Phiico consoiP K4S.00, !;L'‘?S,o’'1i£*Ti“r.r ILKl: “s. 1.s“*niol5S‘'r
26" Baycrest solid statP' .; S5"c*<»ia’«Twi','r..’A?..iri'':
black and wdlile console, ex-
cellent condition H 8 S.OO'Xi iJS:'* 1 jT' cu. F=r. deep'frYeze. 1 '
and all equipment in excellent IYT"* wedding dress with veil, size
shape. $590 or nearest offer. 10: 4 evening dretses, size 10.
595-2062, worn only once; 1 sirtgle bed: 1
■double bed. Phone after 6 : 00 ,
1821 COOK
MOVING
QUALITY HOUSEHOLD
FURNITURE
Direct sale*—Fectory to You
517 KELVIN ROAD
(Off Douglas and Cloverdale
_3*4-3332_
12 GAUGE DOUBLE BARREL,
automatic aieefors, full modified
choke, 160 shells, $149. 12 gauge
Remmington 870 Wingmester
pump, $125. 595-7980. _
WANTED: AAAN'S WET SUIT
and diving equipment. 6' 1", 220
po unds. 477-6009. __ _
RIFLE — MAUSER 7 MM. 1"
groups at 100 yards, scope basis.
Box ammo. Phono 656-4^5.
COMPLETE WET SUIT. FITS r40
pounds. V4" thick. 477-3139.
RUSSIAN bvER~AND UNDER
shotgun, 13-gauge. $125. 479-56M.
SET OF 9 GOLF CLUBS WITH
case, $40. 315-4467.
9.1 CAMERAS. SUPPLIES ,
and PHOTO FINISHING
Fast Fato Service j
24 hour film processing on Kodaco-I
lor. Quality guarantead or money
refunded. — These are not first
run prints. They are color correct¬
ed.
791 Ferf at Bienshard 386-778 7
Island Colour Labs
Super feet quality film prxessini.
Kodaceler II or Fullcoler ll. Cenv
oetlflve ^Ices. In by 10, Out by 5.
FURaMTURE
C H E S t'e R F I EL D SUITE,
74trawer desk. 2 side tables,
Singer treadle sewing machine.
kitchen suite. 479-7984, _
"SKLAR" 4CUSHION g'oLD
bronze chesterfield and matching
chair, good condition, $175. 6>yaar
crib. $20. 656-3776 ._
d’in’ette SUITE. fa'mily'YTze
table, with separate 18" extension
table-leaf. $60. 6 chairs, S 10 each
477-2356.
naugahyd’e che^erfTel'’o
suite, nteds re-covering, $50; Sears
Slender Bender, $15. 656-5690. after
6 e.m.
QUEEN SIZE BED.'i YEAR OLD
Teak dining table and round teak
coffee- habit. 592-26X, leave mes¬
sage.
9 orawer“‘chest of draw-
ers, $35. Older style floor tri-llght,
$70. 386-3847.
TWO SA^ALL HOLLYWOOD TYPE
Deds, covers and skirts to match.
Double dresser. 479-1936.
U N P A I N T E 0 FURNITURE^
dressers, desks, night tables, etc.
479-9538.
WATERBEDS — CUSTOM MADE
Kings, $200, Queens, 1180, com¬
plete. 477-0803._
TWO COUCHES, BED, AND
red velvet headboard. 479-7661.
evenings.
CUSTOM BEDS
Captain, $130; M»t». $110; Bunks.
$90. 479-7400.
3M-3S4I
IKK
UVEMNKIIT
COMFORTABLE CHESTERFIELD
suite In excoilont condition, 8295.
479-8101.
VELVET SECTIONAL S MONTHS
old, good condition, good price.
Phone attar 4, 477-0209.
Victoria's Largest Selection of
COLONIAL _FU^ISHINGS
USED FURNITURE FdR~SALE“4
drawer dresser $25; small wood
<ook kitchen tablo $15; RCA
B and W TV $20; homo mad* aaw-
inq cabinet and chair $35; single
bed box sxing and mattrass $35:'
kitchen table and 2 chairs $35;
rocking chair $15: desk Sll call
W-8155 ^tar 5 p.m^ _ _
ROSE COTTAGE^INTERioRS
We have the best selection of
Country Canadlana in town, spin¬
dle and press-back chairs, match¬
ing tables. Set of 4 oak press-back
chairs and table., Rxkers, dress¬
ers, etc. Quilts made to order.
382-1789. 1109 Catherine.
COMPLETE LIVING ROOM OUT-
flt, nice style in plaid hercuion
chasterfiaid. chair and ioveseat.
Coffee table, square table and
hexagon lamp table, also 2 lamps.
Complete set $675, Brand new. li-
nancing available. The Traders.
Phone 592-3647.
WALNUT FINISH 4 PIECE BED-
room set complete with 612 coil
mattress and box spring and steel
frame worth $325. Night tables. $40
each. Odd chest of drawers. $ 49 .
Dresser with mirror (6 drawers),
$95. The Traders. Phone 592-3647.
BARGAIN ~ LARGE’MAHI3GA-
ny dining or library table, .buffet
or storage unit, 6 upholstered din-
Inq chairs — reasonable offers ac¬
cepted. 592-3061 or 3M-4014. _
COMPLETE WOUSEHOLD FUR-
nlture plus double and single
nsattreases and headboards, any
reasonablt offar will be accaoted.
385-0878.
_384-2242
ARTISAN INSTRUMENT
SERVICE
Quality repairs to photographic
and optical oqulpmant. Now 4t
1113 Langlav Stroot. 388-6721. _
BELL AND HOWELL MOVIE
projector and camtra. super 8,
eute lobd, never uied, $250.
384-2628 efter 5 e.m. 1 ,
2SMM ASAHI PENTAX S>iri‘|.55ti
mm 3.S-135 mm. Takumer lenses, r
383-6293.
SONY VIDEO CASETTf RE-
rerder. other eqlopment. worth
$6,900. secrlhce $2,300. 477-9180.
LIKE NSW BEAUTIFUL WALNUT
dresser, plate glass tltting mirror.
3*5-2391, 383-3091: _ _
SET OF BUNK
cellent condition, l.. ..
offers accepted. 383-5307.
LOVELY OLDER VILAS MAPLE
single sized bed. complete. $135.
598-2072.
CHROME KITCHEN SET.
piece (lergt teble), $90. 477-7386.
98 TV. STEREO. RADIO
SALES And SERVICE
STER’eb ” EXCELLENT
sounding system. Still under
warantee. Only $1000 . 383-9534 be-
twean 7-tO p.m.
WANTED: RCA ‘ “fv, 'mOOEL
33TC825. black and whItt, dual
•peakers. condition unimportant.
478-6198.
VIKING RECORO’plAYER.~PoT^
table. Brand new, $80. 18 free
records with ll. 3*5-6545. 507 $lm-
coe. Number 6
SONY HP. 610 BRAND NEW
ES70S heed. AM-FM, excellent
condition, With or wllheui soeak
art. 382-8734. 312-7387.
groceries, meat
and PRODI CE
FRESH
OKANAGAN
FRUIT
7 places to «erva vou, Bill Bailey's
Garden Centra at the Farmers’
Market. Coiwood, and Saanich
Fruit Growers' Association, Keat¬
ings Cross Rd.
SAVE MONEY AlYf^VEY'S
Sweet Pickled hams, cured but not
smoked S1.T9 par lb.
Standing rib roast $ 1.09 per la.
FREEZER BEEF
Red brand hinds $1,29 per lb.
Red brand sides 99c par lb.
2709 Quadra Street 363-2031
UNTREATED FIjOUR”'
White or whole wheat
25 pounds $3.85
50 pounds $7.55
100 pounds $13.75
. Borden Mercantile Co. Ltd.
3961 Quadra St.
479-2084. 479-3414
"MEAT" AT MoCXDLLS
Sides of Grade A Beet 99c lb.
Black Puddings, Slicing sausage.
White Puddings. Haggis.
PARLIAMENT MEWS
Ste. 5-230 Menzies Si. 387-1611
-LEE'S FARM. 9260 CRESSWELL
Rd., North Saanich. 656-4804. Abso¬
lutely garden fresh, onces that
can't be beat Lettuce, beats, rad¬
ish. green onions, red lettuce, Ro-
, maine, spinach, parsley.
:OKANAGAN~ f'aRM-Fr'eSH PRE-
stoned peaches, ready for canning.
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
at Coiwood Comnwnlty Hall, Sooke
Road. Coiwood. Please bring your
' own containers.
green’ a no~ ye’llo W~B E a N sT
35c pound al Holloways U-pick.
7068 East Saanich Road. OMis and
broccoli lust sterlfnq. Open
8;30-4;30. except Wednts^y. Your
containers.
GR'ain“F’ED~” sib’Es’~bF“8EEF.
cut, wrapped and frozen, 8$c per
pound. Small packages lean
ground beef in 30-lb. lots, 69c oer
Dound_479-3021.
BAIT FOR 5ALEr*ANCHbviES
and Herrinq Strins 50 cents per
package told bv the case. 656-5861,
652-151^_ __ _
CORN. CORN* ~cbRN.”**PICK I
your own. Silver RIM Farm. 7179
Contral Saanich Road. 6Sc dozen. ’
«2^^._652-^.__ I
LOGANBERRIES Y O R s’a’l e'. ^
Freezer crate berries. $6.00 a
crate, iam and wine berries. 90c
lb. Phone ^^^^p_tlll | p.m.
” SILVEfTR’lLL'FARM’’ 1
Corn and beets are now ready.;
7179 Central Saanich Road.'
692-3509 or 657-5566.
WOMAN'S BLACK LEATHER
coat, french coat style with ocelot
collar, peHect condition, size 12,
$195 . 658-8M. '
1 YEAR old'COMPACT WITH
pcwor nozzle and aii attachments
$225^J82-9998. _
ST. MARGARET'S SCHOOL!
tiater. beret, skirt, navy duffel .
coat, size 10 , best price. 313-3193
after 6 p.m.
INGLIS WASHER. 4.CYCLE, I
2-sp**d. $200. Older Ingiis wash¬
er, offers. COfwerted wood and qas
stove, offers. 477-3010.
OLD ARCADE A6ACHINE, WORK-
ing condition, Offers. 595-1191. or
can be seen at tha Arcade. 3220
Douglas Street.
DEEP FREEZE, 11 CUBIC’fEBT.
Ouaensize bed with posture board.
Dishwasher. All Ilka new. 478-674*.
phiLTps"” cabinet~‘“stereo.
like new. $150. 2 original oil palnt-
ingsjn framajt75 each. 384-8773.
VACUUM CLEANERS,’ex-
callant condition, very reasonable.
59S-09S1 after 5 p.m.
basement' fridge, good
order $55. Camp stove and stand.
598-IM3.
CHAINSAW. $40; ’ ELECTRIC
stove, $45; leleviaion, pocket
books. 479-1438.
INDOOR HOUSE PLANTS. HAND-
made beaded iuta plant hangers.
386-1686.
SO GALLON STAINLESS STEEL
soup cauldron, steam, offer.
477-7104.
SINGLE POST " STEEL GAS
pump canopy, fluorescent lighted.
477-2104.
OFFICE DESK and'CHAIR, FIL-
Ing cabinet. Paymaster cheque
writer, 477-7401 after 7 p.m.
9X11 CARPEtrSUNBEAM VACU-
um. floor polisher, dinner sat. ad¬
ding machine, drapes. 477-7426.
MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES',
old grarTvanhone, chairs, pictures,
oak desk, final clearance S98'3929.
752 VIEW ST.
382-5111
SCARCE ITEMS
Vilas maple 6-drawer dressers.
$149.00 and $199.00: Vilas maple
writing table, top refinished.
$95.00; Vilas maple beds, com¬
plete, 54" $129.00 : 48" $119.00; 39"
$159.00: queen size bedroom suite,
complete with two nite tables.
$699.00; Mahogany chest of draw¬
ers, $99.00 and $149.00; oak dress-
ars, $129.00; pine chest of drawers.
$149.00; marble top and back wash
stand. $139.00; tea wagon (small
wheels) $119.00; cedar chest,
$95.00; drop front desk. $149.00;
corner chine cabinet. $289.00;
wooden rocking chairs, $43J0 to
$139.00: console dining table.
$119.00: sets of 4 dining chairs.
$119.00 to $199.00; Hoover washer
spin dry, $99.00; compact vacuum,
$79.00: nest of 3 tables, $99.00:
Oimplex heater, $49.00. Use your
Chargex.
PANDORA FURNITURE LTD.
New and Used Furniture
1050 Pandora Ave. 383-6319
BEATTY AUTOMATIC WASHER, i 595-09S0
SI 99 . 5 O; Stmplicify propane drvar, —
$345: Blond wood curid cabinet, AlttmirMtm r~i
$115. Mat's Bargains, 3460 Quadra,; ^iLiminUrn oUtterS
:384.31S2. 5" CONTINUOUS In baktd enam-
rwnmiuixE V'ABAr-c “cAic. ■ cA-rTio'rtA'v 1'- and awnlnqs-
hiIrMelir'*'and^*2‘ maIchinq*’cfM^ ' *'^*‘’‘** furniture'. I "THE^AME YOU KNcJw”^'*'
teriiald end T mafehiw chairs, mby furnifure, 1964 VW Beetle.-.
l"**!^*^*- odds and ands. 642-3392 1971 PAINTING EQUIP. FOR SALE
mMching ottomM. Black naMa- Kaltasin Rd., Sookt. swinq Kaffold, complaia. used
hyde chatttrfleid and mafehino — — --once, $ 2,200 Grae«».HwrtrA
Chair, wool orianfal dasign rugs, > PRINTING PRESS, CHANDLER sprayer, air^ rwvler^ u'Sw
piano, 21" RCA XLIOO color 'rV, Price letter set, 3 chases, excellent $1,800 479.1443
custom lined drapes, Kitchen Aid 1 working order, complete with IS.,.,^.,. - . __
convertible dishwaihof, dinette set. sets of type. 1 h.p, motor, plus WHEEL TRAILER WITH
washer, dryer, stove, refrigarator, many extras. 479-5100. loading ramps for aquipmanf or
.comoiete stereo set, up»'l9ht. over hydraulic
I freezer, bonk bads, draasars. desk. i o^*^**-, *9 IM
rotary mower, misc. garden tools. "'S t*hle cover, WO, washing me-1 Phone 748-1524 or 793-2860.
Heaver vacuum alants alrl'A blhe cnine, $17$; oval braid rug, 5x7, > ... —
1.,^ ,11 WiWy^,^ W
i/Ncc.»-e .TABc ertiiiB ' 2-spaed bike, as new, $65 each..__^-- - - — ..
viking vacuum cleaner. $ 20 . R^EL lAWN MOWER. ELEC
ment. IBM electric typewriter, xea.AZor trie awn mower dishwaahar
$295; Typewriter stand. $20; Odner 670/, ---;r^is^ 2 iC* days 3M-1^' Iv.
adding machine, $190; 3 M photo MOVING WILL SELL KIAK $60 nings, 479-5405 «4 lyzs. tva-
.copier, $350; Swivel office chair, or bast offer. Color console TV.,..-^^ '-.
$35; Brass hassock display stand, $300. Dryer $125. Call evenings; ^OERN DINING ROOM SUITE.
$30; Headboard display stands, $5 after 9 p.m. or Monday morning.' WOO- 303 rile, with scope, $60. Two
ea.; Set of ll furniture pads, $55; 1658-5983. , t-'' air-rifles. $10 each. 100' chain
Sandwich sign stands, *25 *e.; ®9c*. 4'high, $30. 478-7837.
Steel shelf brackets made of heavy W5; E**'DGE,
duty snglt Iron. $2.50 ea.; Custom }»• Cedar ^k. DM OLD ESQUI-
;made cnesterfield display racks. I’p. 2 10-spead bicvctes. cheep. Larw assortment of
These are suitable for storaae cfl®'*»» topped coffee table. Graen mlscelianaous. All dev, Saturday
,hi-back sofas 3-tier, 6 onlv at Couch. 386-1603.__ _ only.
9 «|V ®^EMENT SALE. SATURDAY iTMrx DDlVl/r
ipily SuV-kli ^urnittre%.%^^ BRICKS
View St., Tues..-Saf.. 9 a.m. S.30 ^ T®'’*
_ .V»Toif'Tr.*JV.C?n"dl”HT,h^
MOVING SEPT. 1ST. MUST ’ ladsf' 7;ABAap“cirp"~eiiw C.C.M. TRICYCLE, HOCKEY
sell. rugs, flowored wool self un- ^2/ loji w* '“'‘9* aasortmont tropical
derlev; baige short shao. rubber children's books,
undarlay, matching runnars and *' * f®®', 658-1193.
mats, robber undarlay; inplis dlst >e$ etc. _:$piN~r^p'v"«/AVucB' tit
washar and drvar, larga combi- GARAGE SALE rfr«n 1 ®^^
fridge,. « Furniture, plants^ ^ds and ends.'
MISTER SWEEPER
^ ... '^EEL LAWN MOWER. ELEC- Furnlture^liiS^ .ah.
New and used vacuum claantrs, trie lawn mower, dishwasher, cash iam CAmMSn* strAiW
Every make in stock af fantastic register. 2 TVs. Devs. 3e?-1925; Sat
bargains. Guaranteed. Eveninqs, 479-5405. Sunday.
906 Esquimau R^-Jal Head St.) wALLP'a'per’FOR SALE,’ Fr'o'm ^UfERSCOPF
- 386-294J__designer's -collection, and Van
■UNIVERSAL TRADING CENTR ^uU '•egular $28 to.M2 c»r roll.
584 Johnson, Uostalrs Warehoust erlM. M2-373S.
ISTg l'i. virBV."s.r;nd'na." '
W" ELECTRIC RANGE, FRtGI-' ILLUMINATED SIGNS 9' X
lequipmeni; fils 10.13 years,'- - _ - -_
;477.0454. IBEOROOM CHESTERFIELD
iwicuu cTOFET AMr\ Aki '$oltoO' vioMn, fishing equipment,
VIbW SIRecT CURIOS AND AN-itoo < mivallAriAniiA ItAm*
'tiques. Open 7 days a week. 9:3o!5W 3948 uems.
a.m. to 1:00 p.m. 1005 View streat.j— "... ..
382-2821. Used furniture and china LARGE STATIONARY INGERSOL
of all tyoas. icompreasor. 200 C.P.F. minute.
.•■IHas to be moved soon. 386-1232 or
Everything including the kitchen
sink — used building supplies,
curios, furniture, etc.
730 Market — Tues. thru Set.
10-6:38. 384-3614.
SEWING A6ACH1NE. ZIG-ZAG
and reverse stitches with cabinet,
excellent condition. $75. Man's
good golf bag. 3 drawer legal file
cabinet. Trailer hitch for Datsun.
$10. 477-2145.
OEMO SALE
1372-1374 Hillside. Electrical and
plumbing fixtures, all size of
lumbar, plyvmod windows, doors,
cupboards, shrubs, used bricks.
Sat. and Sun. 9-5.
industrial sewii
ver's Sawing
388-6228.
ig machines. Saw-ICARPETING FOR SALE, ONLY 6
Centre, 840 Fort.' months old. Like new. 385-0905, ask
tape racorder with built In mike,
plus hand mike and strong AC
adapter. 385-2291. 383-3091.
THE STORE OF '’a'~MILLION
KEYS
PRICE'S LOCK AND SAFE LTD
®<7_Fort__ 384-4101
FRIDGE, OLDER ’bLIT'’cLEAN.
$70; set of golf clubs, older but
good starter, $30. View at 3152
Mars St.
MODERN BEDROOM SUITF
without mattress, $300. Beioa
drapes^ $50. _478-2644.
king' size 'bed, '$223~Y‘paRT-
menf dryer, $115; raclinar chair,
$35. carpets. 386-0865.
RED
ooan.
479-9444
BARN ANTIQUES NOW
<596 West Saanich Ro.,
tor Stan, Must sell' before 'Sap-!'^^TAL-MINERAL DETECTOR,
r- A D A r c cAi e tember 1. ' 1930 mahogany floor lamp and oil
garage SALE: SUNDAY,' - 1 lamp. 477-3405
August 22. 10-4. Bicycles, skis, 6" PLANER WITH v, h.P. - - ■-—-
skates, toys, boots. 820 Rock- motoc. iigsaw. 34" throat wlthl3 GREETING CARD RACKS,
heights. motor. 4-speed drill press with chopped drv firewood, kinq size
BABY CLOTHES AND ADULT
clothes, shoes, coats. One gun AM3VING OVERSEAS. SELLING , 'WASHER SPIN
case. Ask (or Tom. 382-2087, bo- taoedeck, FM stereo, skiing equip-'®*'‘ Gothic arm-
tween 9 and 5 rrenl, hair dryers, curler, plants. I -
AS NEW PORTABLE WASHER .. • V «OTOR Ho^f
—* -pin dryer. $125. . 9x12 .green STORE FIXTURES, 2 GLASS' siST/zes ''* conversion. 1 »,
and wood display cases, One oldi :_— __
<*^*0197 bonks.,GARAGE SALE CANCELLED AT
652-3612 or 653-1452. , 530 Parkes Rd.. off Metchosin and
Wishart.
GE WRINGER-
I.
LIFE membership. 'EUROPE-
an Fitness Spa. $iS0. S92-7476.
WIDE mouth” QUART
(or canning. 598-3940.
70 JAM JARS. $15. 382-6689.
POOL TABLE
If you've room tor it this Is the
best professional 6'x12'. With no
longer available 1</i" slate. Mint
condition. 592-1556.
play’pen. chYnge~t'a'b'l’e^2
car seats, back carrier, buffet, old
chair, 2 large mirrors, old steamer
trunks, 50 gallon oil tank and
stand, range_hoad._SW-4W.
AUTOMATIC WA8HER'*Y65. 30"
range with rotissarie. needs repair.
Baycrest stereo. $65- -Stereo.
$10. walnut buffet. $30. 50 pocket
books. $15. Miscallar^s. 479^-1479.
ofARAOE SALE; ' SATURDAY
iSiy* a.m..4:00 o.m.
2114 Neil St.. Oak Bay. Sewing
I machine, floor polisher, tovs.
I books and miscellaneous items.
K I KENMORE DRYeR,’2'’CYCLES,'“6
* heat temperature, $135. VIkinq
washer. 2 cycle. 2 wafer tamoera-
, hires. $145. Beth excellent condi¬
tion. 385-037IX or 386-9983.
PORTABLE PANASONIC WASH-
er spin dryer, $150. Metal crib,
$36. 385-6215 or 382-0876.
PHOTOCOPIER
Must sail. $700 or best offer. Phone
598-4515, batwetn 9-5.
SEALY hTdE- 4LBED',~' BRO)^
color, $75 or offers, email air cool-
$i0. 6S6Q677.
1*1
TELEPHONE ANSWERING REN-
tals by the waek — month or vaar.
intejxormact, 3*4-o^i.
C’0MPLETE~SAW WARPEnInG^
Island Saw Co.. 617 Chatham
Straet. 385-5500
OUTDOOR INCINERATOR BAR-
rels, ready to use. Free dtUvtry.
$5.79. 383-1328.
5xio BRUNSWIC
for
POOL TABLE
383-073I_ _ _
CHINA CA'bi'nBT, ”|75.~BL’aCK
and white TV, stereo and record
^ayer com binatio n. 8150 . 477-6868.
ALUMINUM WINDOWV AND
patio doors, double and single
glazed, half prica. 479-7256.
FRIDGE AND STOVE FOR SALE,
Call 3*4-5365. after 5:30 P.m.
APARTMENT MOVING SALE,
Saturday and Sunday 10:00 to 4:00
p.m.. No. 4-1210 Tattarsall.
3*<-911*._ __
A WORLD OF PLASTICS
ONE STOP PLASTIC HEAD¬
QUARTERS-INDUSTRIAL PLAS-
TICS, 2105 DOUGLAS.
BRYDON BOY MARINE TOILET,
as new, $45. Top quality china
wesh basin, I4"x32" with taps end
fittings, $30. Phone 598-8458.
BOX SPRING AND AAATTRESS,
Sealey, 39", clean, good condition,
$ 20 . Phone 477-2927,
ROLL AWAY ’ BEOr'CA^ERA
and miscellaneous small items.
658-5440.
BACKYARD SALE, RAIn' OR
Shine. 100 Wellington Ave. 1 Hork
oft uailas Rd. Sunday 9 a.m.
GOOD USED WINDQWS AS NEW.
cheap. 478-6588 evtninqs. Saturday
and Sunday.
VIKING WRINGER WASHER,
timer and pump, good condition
$40.00. 598-6495.
30" FINDLAY ELECTRIC
range, es new, $200. Phiico fridge.
$50. 3*30078._
7' rubber"“tree7*'9'“^ilo
dendron (4 varieties). $75. Call
477-9879.
OA'k WAR'OROBE'CLOSE’TrMID-
die and rear seat for vw van. '66
In ternafioni Traveled. 3*2-1391.
VIKING AUTOMATIC WASHER.
$90. Frloidelrr dryer, no vent re
qulred, $50. 479-1138 after noon.
NEAR NEW BABY STROLLER,
excellent condition. Dinette table,
only 2 months old. 598-6412.
TWO sY'NCHlE'ATSrEACH'cOM
plete with 3 seet belts, for Ford
van. 658-8235.
30"' v‘lKING WHITE RANGE. 165,
30-X Winchester model 94, ex¬
cellent condition, $85. 477-6489.
HATLEY MEM0RIAl’~6ARDENS.
2 burial lots, contact Mackie
299-3560 Burnaby.
MOvTNGrMUSf~SELL~ MISC EL
laneous furniture, entigues, cnina.
etc. 7194 veyanesse. 652-2J15.
MOVING ALL HOUSEHOLD’ - __
fw »»l*. >0106 Bewerbenk MEDIUM BROWN REID MERF
FOR Rd.. Sidney. 656-6495. Idith wig complete with case and
- I stand. &. Phene 598-7938.
CB RADIO. TWIN ANTENNAS.
SIN- $170 also 2 6.45-13 tires, roof rack. iSANDERSON FLORAL DRAFFS.
” '598-5530. 1 lined to fit 108" wide. 595-3306.
100 MISCELLANEOUS
I‘X>R SALE
COPPERTONE FRiOCE AND
itov«. CE 21<tjblc foot frMJor.
Genuino mopit bunk b«d». High
bocktO chMitrfItId ond chair.
Gardon shod, 6'xS'. Briqgs and
Stratton 5 horaeoowtr riding mow-
tr, 18" gat mowar, European tent,
ttaepa 4, camping eat ttovt.
478-5118._ __
WINDOW DRAPES. CUSTOM
made, full length Avocado sheers.
With hooks, I' len^h, S panets,
will cover approx. 28' width.
Priced at fraction of cost, $165
(firm). Alto approximately 20'
width of white sun sheer with
hooks, priced easily at S95. Phone
382-2818. __
TOSHIBA COLOUR TELEVISION!
$^00; Pioneer stereo svstem, SS'O;
chesterfield end 2 chefra, $50;
lamps, side tables, double wa-
terbed, typewriter. Suzuki guitar,
books, rKords, S-track taoe deck
and tapes, FM car radio, mis¬
cellaneous clothing and household
goods. 312-5039.
TILUCUM rURNirURE
2612 SOOKE RD.
Carries full selections of uphol¬
stery supplies, tools, fabrics, ar '
materials. Rubber and poly by ti.
sheet or olece. We manufacture
cuthiona. Free eatimetes. 4714522.
ROBERTS REEL-TO-REEL RE-
corder. bird bath. ton coal, cord
dry wood. Valour heater, txio,
t0x12 breid rugs, floor polisher,
1965 Volkswagen snow tires.
a7906l2, 3854616. _ _
•BUNK BEDS, $40. FRENCH
doors. $40. One leedad door plus
odd doors, 2 bicycles, cheap. 3
stripped newel posts. Mlnl-bike, 5
horsepovrer, good condition, $185.
477.4G38;_
APARTMENT FRIDGE, EXCER~
else bike, violin, sun lounge. Re¬
gina electric broom. three4lece
alligator luggage. Singer feather¬
weight sewing machine, n>ehogBny
night tebias, phone 598^^3._
OARAGE SALE? AUG. 21, 10 A.M.
to 3 p.m. at 1735 Cedar Hill X Rd
Davenport living room sat, refrig¬
erator, dressers, cabinets, ladders,
some tools. Many other miscella¬
neous items.
MUST SELL —30" GAS RANGE,
$75. 2 beige rugs with felt un¬
derlay, $20 and $35; old English
automatic washer. $35; eledrlc
lawnmower, $45. Or best offers.
595-5357;_ _ _
BL/tck AND dVcKER TWIN
biada electric mower, new condi¬
tion with 100 ft. cord. NevA$l20,
sell $75. Rubber tire hand mower,
■ike new. ^15. 386-M26._
II' OVAL POOL, BY 4r' DEEP,
new liner, hcevy duty filter pump,
aluminum ladder, and winter
cover. 479-1663.
CONTEMPORARY CHESTER-
fteld and chair, 8 mm movie pro-
lector, older styia. Passap knitting
machine, exerciser. 592-9773.
KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR
and stove in vary good running
condition, floor polisher, 4 rugs,
479:3940. __
BEATTY SPIN DRY WASHER.
Speed Queen spin dry washer,
good condition, Jim's Appliance,
477-2560. _ _ _
11X12 WHITE AND BEI(iE SHORT
shag carpet, near new. 1959 Volks¬
wagen, good motor, whole or
part s, 386-9297. _
MOVING. WILL SELL BIG
house (full) duality furniture, appli¬
ances, carpets plus Buick. Ply-
mouth, 477-9839.__
STh"WHEEL CONVERSION ANY |
type trailer, includes truck re-i
ceiver. wiring, professionally en-i
pinesrtd, manufactur^. 386-6 643. I
imperTal infra-red lamp.!
660 watts, $75. For details phone
383-76R2._ __
ROYAL WORCESTER 8 PLACE
setting, also large silver tray and
ell lamp. Offars. 599 -6861 . _ _
FOR SALE, »''~KENMORE
Stove. 1 year eld. $200. 933 Walker
St;^ 3 83-5440. __
KITCHEN NOOK, ALMOST NEW
with matching stool. Colonial bunk
bads. 47 9-7757. __
WOODEN BARRELS, ASSORTED
sizes, for furniture and decorating
ideas. 383-1328-
SMALL GOLD FLORAL CHES-
terfield. $165. Gold shag rug,
27"x20'. $25. 592-4623. _ _
LIGHT-WAY INC.
WhoiBsale Pricas to Confractora
695 ;^tia_384-9359
FOR SALE, 1969 FIAT HAr’d
top. Must ba sold, whet offers.
5 92-7680 or 382-1510. _
FOR SALE, 1968 CHRYSLER
Newport hardtop. Must be sold,
w hat offers? $92-7680 or 382-1510.
1972 ANNE BUSHNELL PAINT-
ing for sale. 3854655. _
103 >USCEUJiNEOt;S
WANTED
WANTe05^A“GOOO“AOOING
machine or calculator -that will
add, subract, multipiv, divide. Will
be used vary little but must be In
good repair. Essantlai that It have
tap# and be electric. Phone
592-2120.___
1 N^ED OLD WOOD”sTOvF
stone crocks, woodan tables and
cnaira, picture frames, copper kef-
ties, wooden trunks or boxes,
pump organ, miscellaneous wood
fvrniiuj^a, etc. 479-2684.
109 ~ MIRCELLANOUS
TO RENT
^WYER SeWlNG CENIPE
REN1 TO OWN -- Domestic sno
indL^rtal sawing machinas
l*ORT 3W4228
CLOSED MONDAYS
IL! WANTED TO RENT
AU8CELLANEOUS
125 PETS and SUPPUES 130
REGISTERED IRISH SETTER
PUPS, male, 10 weeks. Sira Cham-
Kinsalas Arkie Ratlecfion.
HEA\’Y EQUIPMENT
and MACHINERY
am Chempion O'lrlah HlghlandiP>8f'f/.. ,3* >
ally. Sea them by appointment. 05'^4-f2A-l28i, 500
sally. ..
^79-5510._
WANTED GOOD HOME FOR A
vearKtId neutered male tabby cat.
His nanst la Paddy and ha Is love¬
ly. Please phone 595-4060 after 5 or
383-6270 anytime. Ask for Diana.
TWIN 671 CM DIESEL
POWER
modal
_ .- ... amps, at 440
volts. Maximum output ^>ifU)lta.
314 hours on rebuilt motor. Contact
G.^Ral, 3$6-Ml4, O.IC Trucking Co.
FIFfH^^VE EL~TRAILER“wI^
loading ramos for aouipment or
cars, vacuum over hydraulic
brakes. Haul up to 14,000 iba
Phone 748-1524 or 753-2860.
view Roys! 7 Y^nXhAR small OjESEL~TRAC
P.m., 479-5329, 643-»36. Ihdustrial and Marina an
-- - —-omes now available at Sfanwood
THE ORIGINAL "SHAGGY DOG" I Equipmant, 652-1231.
story ... a Pull ^Hungarian '
Sheepdog) from Aronvafe Kennels. U-VARD RELI
Registered pupcies and soma complete with
adults. 246-3419 Crofton. .
EXCELLENT WITH CHILDREN.
Glouy Dark MahoganY registarad
Irish Setter Female oups, 652-5817,
if no answer 3M-4769.
WANTED
place for _ _
384-2592 aHtr 6 P.m.
3 POINT BLADE AND 3 POINT
postal Auger, for salt. Wanted
walk behind sickle and imalltst
crawler wWh front loader, 477-1784,
115
cAce I affectionate SIAMESE KIT-
STfWAGfc !t*n, seaipoint, chocolate, bluapolnt.i SAWMILL — LOGGING EQUIP
small English car. frostpoint, registered parents. uRlfJ 1$ tf-
384-3082 4-bonk carriage; 52" mw, 2 drum
.. - -donkey, 2 trucks. 478-1805.
REG'D PUPPIES: BOSTONS, PO-
meranlana, Lhasa Apsos, Toy
Spaniels, One Pekingese. Cobble
Hill 743-2701.
SWAPS
IMMACULATE 2 YEAR OLD 4
bedroom ocean ylaw home. 25 min¬
utes from Victoria. 2 fu I baths, I
workshop, finished 300 so ft GREATER VICTORIA DOG 08E-
rumpM room, carpeted through- Club. Puppies 3 to
out, (Irapiace, sundack, carport. 1 9 months taken at anytime.
$30,000. 10% financing at $280 per 1992-7310.
month. Could accept rnoblle home.
RV. smarrcruiief.'' oider"property
ar? as pari down payment. Ao- • ChihoahoaSj
JEEP COMMANDO, 4-WH
drive, excellent condition, 2
and cash. 598-3064.
chasM, V-6 Cummings diesel,
and^^A Swap tor %-ton plckui
1964 C«EV 4 TON WITH HOIST
for email crawler with loader or
will considar akid steer loadar.
MODERN AND ANTIQUE GUNS
will trade for 16' to 18' giau boat
477-8881.
CCM EXERCISE BIKE, HARDLY
used, for full size baby's crib, '
go^ condition. 598-3651.
116 C'OINS AND STAMPS
SELLING YOUR STAMPS? SEE
our yellow page advertisement
under stamps. F. E. Eaton Assoc.
Ltd., Vancouver, or phone VIcIO'
ria, 386-1680.
WANTED BY
Ill ART and ANTIQUES
tioues open seven days
9:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. 10
china of all types.
b, cat. power
Shift, 90% left on running gear, en¬
gine and transmission completely
overhauled. 643-3W.
CAT — ALLIS CHALMERS HD S.
^cket, $2^0. 748-2414 Duncan.
TRANsiT GURI
modal new condi
LEY ENGINEERS-
Ition $370. 385-5265.
150 CABS FOB SALE
ISIIIrB
TOYOTA
200 NEW
TOYOTAS
Ready For
Delivery
31 DEMOS
Huge
Discounts
160 CARS FOB SALE
m FARM IMPLEMENTS
WE HAVE A NEW SHIl_
of antiques Including round oak
tables and chairs, Ontario pint,
and many other Interesting arti.
cles. Red Barn Antiques, 4596 West
Saanich Rd.
i WANTED; QUALITY ANTIQUES,
furniture, clocks, rugs, etc. Top
prices paid. David Robinson.
384-6425.
. CLOCKSMITH
Repairs, antique clocks, grand-
.father clocks, watches. Citizens
Ltd., 388^69._
EDISON CYLINDER 'rECOrVs,
reasonable; cabinet wlnd-uo gra-
maphona for 78$. 595-4768.
EDISON FIRESIDE CYLINDER
oramoohone, 2-4 minute. Mint con¬
dition. $375. 3854350.
f'iU GARDEN SUPPLIES
B.C. GREENHOUSE BUILDERS
Lifetime aluminum^lass green¬
houses. See our hobby models dis¬
played at the P.N.E. and Elk Lake
Garden Centra. For brochures
write 783 Hutchinson, or phone
385-2841, 385-8445, anytime.
I COARSE PEAT MOSS
Special this week. $12 par yard
' pickup. $14 par yard delivered.
; Borden Mtrcanflla Co. Ltd.
1 3961 Quadra St.
479-2084, 479-3«l4.
PLATEOLASS WINDOW PANES,
6'x3'x4mm, $13. each. 593-3707.
POWER REEL-TYPE LAWN
mower, $70. 478-1476 after 5.
SPECIAL STRAIGHT OLD COW
manure, no sawdust, 7 yards, $49.
Bag. $1.75. Old horse manure, 7
yards, $34. 5954773.
PENORAY FARMS, COW NU-
nure, 6 yards, $42, daiiverad.
477-1519._
Piouing, Rotovatinf
and Cultivating
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED
AUCTIONS
Tuesday — 7 p.m.
Friday — 1:30 p.m.
APPRAISALS
For All Purpose
386-3308
THE SALVA’llON ARMY
Needs your re-usable cloth¬
ing, furniture and household
goods. '‘Help us to help
others." Family Thrift
Stores. Victoria, Sidney and
Lmgford. For pickup —
386-:;'J95.
BRENTWOOD
BARGAIN BARN
BftTM QUALITY USED
FURNITUI^ AND APPLIANCES
Before you buy or sail
jnis ^sf Saan. Rd. 6nj711_
OLD 3030 WINCHESTER, PUMP
action shot gun and Nazi German
daggers, swords, arm band, ate.
598-2327.
JON'J, TRACTOR i-ERVICE
477-3913
Wt rotr.vatt, plow, cut grass and
orush niso. loading and hauling
TopgoU, Rocks and Fill
GRAVEL SUPPLIES
Sand, aoH, gravel.
FREE FILL
Delivery charga only
when available, reasonable rales
471-4144, 478-4691
SCREENED TOPSOIL '
nure and sand added. $1
erad, minf
sand S3
_ .... added. $11 oar yard
delivered, minimum 6 vardt. Gar¬
den sand S3 oar yard Plus dell-
vary. Road qraval. E. NlxoqXtd
rnone 385 -4431 0^3^5641_ _
VIRGIN SOIL ~
Rich, black peat soil, shredded,
clean, $9 par yard. Call A-1 for
fast delivery, 383-1532.
HEALTHY KITTENS. ALSO NEU-
farad cats, raguira good homes.
Animals Crusaders. 386-9833.
SHETLAND SHEEPDOG PUP!
Pies, rag'd with shots. Loving and
affectionate companions. Excellent
padigrae. Phone 746-6686.
BEAGLE PUPPIES, MALES
only, puratrad. Phone Cobble hill
743-3117.
FRIENDLY BLACK LAB, ONE
year old. Phona attar 4 p.m.
384-2169.
ONE-YEAR-OLD ST. BERNARD
tamale, spayed plus ^ St. Barnard
female pup. 9 weeks. 479-8598.
FOR SALE: LARGE FLIGHT
approx. 3Wx3'/i'. $45.
ADORABLE FREE KITTENS TO -
a good home, house trained. ^
598.5882. n
FREE: 4 HOUSE TRAINED KIT- p
tans to good home. 598-5083. w
SPRINGER CROSS YaV'puP*s 7 -
ready August 33. 656-5063. 1
FRENCH EUULDOG PUPPIES, p
ready now. 3e2-3825. altar 5 p.m. ,
REOISTEREO GERAAAN SHEP m
hard puppies. 746-6444 Duncan. "
MONGREL DOG, FREE TO 7
good homo. 479-1438. ■
HEATHERBELLE SCOTTISH h
terrier puoolas. Phone 479-3651. L
ImALE IRISH SETTER,
1 months old. 385-7697. f
WANTED WHITE TOY FE- t
mala poodle registarad. 743-9674, ^
1 Y€AR OLD PURE BRED
mala Irish setter $50. 112-743-3783.
7 WEEK OLD PUPPIES FOR
sale, $10. 478-4693.
TONKENESE-BURMESE KIT- 1
tans, $40. 478-5025.
137 CHICKS. POULTRY ^
HATCHING EGGS 1
SUPPLIES 31
ORIENTAL PHEASANU~AND t
1 quail, fartcy pigeons. Phone attar 5 !■
• P.m. 382-3744. ^
PAiRS OF BOB WhTtE qTiAIL 1
_ __^-2984 ^
WANTED: ONE SILKY HEN, '
479-1663. 9
138 LIVLS'i'OCK SUPPLIES v
AND EVENTS g
Tap Shelf Feeds Inc. 5
A New Feed Stare J
Serving This Area
Located at 60 Crease Av#., turn '
right at Harriat Road, 1 block P
north of Woolco on lha Island ^
Highway. Phona 386-1941. *
GOOD 4.YEAR-OLD THOROUGH- 7
^ 9 d, make a good lady's hack or \
iumpar. Good lags and body, sound *
In every way. Must be sold. Rea- 9
sonabla. Tried at Victoria Riding 9
Academy. 592-1124. y
13 HAND, 8 -YEAR- 6 lD~ GELO-i*
ing, gtntia and well schooled, no 1
vices. Experienced oony clubber. 3
Gentle tamparmani. bast suited to w
0
PRIVATELY OWNED BAY
mare, 14.2 h.h., excellent tor show- r
ing and good schooling pony. Can k
be seen at Victoria Riding Act- r
demy or call S93-6000 or 642-3506. L
$700, firm otter considered. *
2 REGISTERED OUARTER j
horse show mares tor sale. Ona by ^
Doc Daabar and one by Guthrie V
Bob $4500 for pair. Principals only.
Phone 653-1835. -4
SEE OUR UNIOUE IMPORTED i*
donkey breeds at Saanichton Fair, m
S oma for salt. 5450 Rocky Point, "
Donkey Breading Farm. Open Sun- 'i
days or by aopolntmant. 478-8710. w
16.3 HH PALOMINO GELDING, 5 T
years old, started iumpinq, also -
drives, quiat disposition. Also 17 1
Inch Stubben stddla, axcallent con- c
ditlon. 7484967. |r
ALFALFA HAY FOR SALE 5
High protein Washington alfalfa by 1
tf9 ton or by the bale. Order now. r
?rJS*AJ* till October, e
748-0490. s
FIRST CUT AVAILABLE OUT OF 1
TZ prices. Second cut s
S?-®®* Waadowbfook Farm, a
748 O 0 M Duncan. •
ROMNEY BREEDING GROUPS. T
10 crossbred Romney awe lambs t
plus non-raiated ovrabrad Romnay e
Ram. nQ.8S9-9343. n
OP EXCESS TACK. EN- K
gllsh and Western, pony., cm and \
[wrsa slus. Saddles, bridles, etc. p
Low pricas. 478-1264. 4
MP
Induftrlal-
STANWOOD
EQUIPMENT SALES LTD.
6805 VEYANESS
652-1231
"YOUR LOCAL MASSEY
. DEALER"
vrwB', V KVIlll DMbll,
belt pulley, and wheel
H.P. ROPER TRACTOR,
i, loader, naar new, $2600. E.
AAover, R.R. 1, Chamalnus,
LEASE V'EHICLES
MOTORS LEASING
Ltd. 1101 Yates St.
LEASE A VOLVO
Phon# Jim Bryson 384-1161
Brian Holley Motora
_M19 Douglas St.
_ CARS FOR SALE
MERCURY A60NTEREyT~ 4
h. t. Electric windows. Power
'ing and brakes. Auto Trans.
IG TOWN. 71 GTO CON-
, automatic, power brakes,
staarlng, 58400 miles.
FORD RANCH WAGON, 302
592-4132 or 386-7290.
4 Speed, posi-trac. mag
ate. asking, $1,775.
Oatsun 510 Station Waqon,
BUICK COMPACT V-6,
r hardtop. Automatic, clean
cheap to operate. $795.
I STATION CAR, '72. RED
I paint. Black Interior. Bean
$4600 or offers. 3$S-4892.
PLYMOUTH SEDAN, V-8
TOP SOIL AND GRAVEL
Excellent quality top soil shredded
ready for use. U haul or wt'll
deliver, call 478-1000.
SCREEN BLACK LOAM. 7
yards $63; bag $2; rich clean
sandy loam, ideal for lawns. 7
yards. $50. Good fill soil 7 yards.
12 HAND, 7-YEAR-OLD GELD-
ing, kind and willing, no vices.
Suitable for beginners or experi¬
enced rider. $150. 47 8-1264.
QUALIFIED H'ORSESHdETNG
end^ trimminq, Dan McPherson.
VifW <?^3226 or Duncan
748-1170.
COMET. NEEDS LITTLE
k. 2 new tires with mags, plus
e. $52S or nearest offer, or
FORD GALAXIE, HARD
1974 GRAN TORINO WAGON, IM-
maculate, low mileage, pood ruh-
be’-, new ^now tires. $4,300 or
offer. 592-7160.
,, ^ FOUND
2 bay horsaa. 1 mare,
I Rocky Point area.
1971 PLYMOUTH CRICKET
door, automatl , royal blue, good
rondiflon best olfar to $1?00.
Phone 592-4025.
TOYOTA AAARK 11. BEAUTI-
condition. 20.000 miles. New
soil with sand a
yards for $65, 14
Self pickup for
4784261.
$18. 478-3322,
MOVING? WE BUY OLD FURNI-
lure, tools, antioues, and collecta¬
bles. odds and ends. 642-3735. any¬
time.
NUMBER 1 SCREENED TOP
soil $9 par yard Langford area,
minimum 5 yarHs, pickup load
PtW)# 478-6649.
~ free'pill
20,000 yards, hauling charaea
only. $8Ul34. OK Trucking Co.
STRINGED INSTRUMENTS IN
any condition wanted for caen.
Pnvata, 382-3518, evenings.
LARGE GOLDEN EAGLE
mounted with wings spread. 1863
Civil war muzzle loader. W-2327.
OIL PAINTINGS OR WATER
colera by Verner and Gissing.
382-4636.
WANTED: CANADIAN AND U.S.
Coins. Also Canadian Paper
Money. 4784580.
WE BUY FURNITURE. HOUSE-
hold goods, pictures, tools, ate.
Best cash prices. 386-0462 enytime.
IF YOU ARE MOVING AND
have furniture, ate., for sate
please call 595-7567 or 383-8311.
P.O. BOX URGENTLY RE-
quirad will buy or pay full rant to
share. 383-1466.__
WOOD BURNING STOVE OR
heater In good condition. Reason-
able price. 479-6108.
WANTED: WIND-UP GRAMO-
phone, complete or parts. 595-4768.
cubic feet. $150. 382-3518. evenings.
FREE PICKUP OF YOUR SCRAP
metal, motors pipes etc. 478-4963.
STEEL GARAGE DOOR WANT-
ed. 7 X 8, yS- 1666. _
TWD-WHEBLEO BIKE ~FCR 6-
vear-old, 812-1262.
TOP SOIL FOR SALE. HEAVY
black loam, $8 per yard, delivered.
Light sandy loam, $7 per yard de¬
livered. Cell 652-3572.
SAVE-SAVE. VIRGIN BUSH SOIL.
U_Mr_yard delivered. 479-5088.
133 PETS and SUPPUES
SHADYBROOK KENNEL
Purebred German shepherd pups,
black and tan, registered, wormed,
tattooed, immunized. Call 743-9447.
mayodn““poodle villa. 4
miles south of Duncan. Rag'd min-
lalures black poodle puppies. $100.
7434493.
I WOULD~UKE‘T6nSOARb~OUT
my l-yaar-cld Samoyian crou for
approximately $ months starting
September 4, 658-5095.
CHAMPION SIRED LASSIE COL-
he PUPS. PerfKt family pets. $150.
Melt and females. 7414090 Dun-
can.
2-7 WEEK OLD GREY TABBBY
kittens need good home, Uttar box
trained. Use to children and dogs.
592-7628.
2 BLACK REGISTERED FE-
male Lab retriever puppies from
proven show, obedience and field
stock. $150 . 479-7056.
PIGEONS FOR SALE. ROLLERS
$2 each. Homing $1 each. If taken
by quality will gat batter deal.
Phone 386-9874.
R EOVSTE R ED LABRADOR~rF-
trltver from show and fl^d trials
stock. Shire and dame x-raved
clear . Excellent eedigree. 478-977 8.
WARNING ALL PET OWNErT
Dogs end cats are being stolen In
nearly every area. Animals Cru¬
saders.
FREE TO GOOD HOME TWO-
yeer-old golden Lab, very gentle,
goo d with ch ildre n. Phon e 38^ 953.
free BLACK 9 MOnVhTpXn-
lel Poodle cross, spayed. Female,
had shots. 479-7229.
MUST SELL, QUARTERHORSE
A^gan gelding, 15.3 hands, good
^Mosltlon, 1300, tKk included.
592-6161.
M64 AUSTIN CAMBRIOC-n,
4-d(x>r, 'good economy trensoor-
tatlon. $500 or bast oftar, 388-7080
7 HEREFORD COWS WITH
first calves, $360 each. Hereford
Halter, brad. $2tS. 478-6301.
REGISTERED TOG "mTTkiNG
goat and yaarllng, 3 pairs Bantam
X, Phone 479-4131.
'70 MAVERICK FOR SALE OR
35 mpg.,
$1300. Phona 385-3754 attar 6.
CHEV IN MiVt cdNOITION*
383 Automatic, P.S. and P B
Phona Nanaimo 390-4333.
1972 z'm CAMARO,~ RADIALSi
74 ^* 5550 ' •*^*'*' Duncan
ircH Ev'MsT'Godb'r R AN spor".
I?» <>n, must sad. Ottars on $400.
Call after 5 e.m. 3*t-S03O.
HAY, $1.50 A BALE. PHONE Vic¬
toria 59S-MI2 or weekends Nanai¬
mo 753-5458.
TAcic SALE: SADDLE, BRI-
dlas, boots, and much more.
653-2355, 653-3306.
FEED POTATOES, $30 PER TON.
MIchall Brothers, 3015 Island View
Road.
ONE GOOD MILK c6w.~HdC-
Slain; 1 Hereford cow and calf. 2
veal calves. 642-5967.
FOUR-WHEEL HORSe-dRAWN
buggies tor aala. Phona evenings.
113-743-5146.
MUST S^LL 1947 FORD 7 DOOR
«8 cu. Inch 4-speed, bast
offa' takes. Phone M6-36W,
MUST SELlTwT ford 3‘door
sedan ci<. inch 4 *'^«ad, best
offer takes. Phone 3863650.
'68 CORTINA GY. tNTF^OR
and motor in excellent condition.
Rad's'S, radio, $9CKi. 598-6409.
EXCELLENT AYRSHIRE MILK
cow, lust trashanad, first calf.
Both $300. 113-743-3493.
1945 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER,
console, much chroma, all power,
good runninn order. 3*2-9795.
2 CALVES, CHICKENS, GUINEA
hens, rabbits, and oony. 478-4792.
''^UST BE SEEN.
10 a.m. to 3 e.m.
1967 LTD 289. VINYlT RODF"
o^^condltion machankally, $785.
'64 BUICK s P EC lA L GOOD
3^17 s7 •••‘•'19 *390-
SECOND CUT HAY. ALSO FIRST
cut. Phona attar a. 746-6979.
8-YEAR-OLD QUARTERHORSE
mare. 478-1185.
FEED POTATOES AND HAY.
6858 Pat Bay Highway, 653-1583.
SELLING GOOD 5AANEN MILK-
ing goat and yaarllng doe. 478-6307.
**9"^ 9 aulomatic,
only 59.000 miles, 2 owners, excep¬
tional. Bargain, 8795. 384.3827.
'70 CUTLASS S. Pdw»FR~STEii’-
Sr'S!'™'’''"' ■’«'
QUANTITY GOOD HAY $55 PER
ton. $1.50 par bale. 477-3339.
LOVELY 12.3 HAND PONY,
quiet, $200 with tack. 478-7488.
GOOD OAT HAY FOR SALE. $175
a bale. 653-1875.
74 VW DASHEP WACOM r'ucTn**
radio and carrier,, radlals, 59,000
miles 97995 . 595-5243.
DOUBLE HORSE TRAILER FOR
sale. 653-3237.
1965 HILLMAN GOOD MP'HANI-
cal condition, oew tires etc. open
to offers. 479-6503. '
'69 I^Rb~^TRLANE~4~BAR^
f?'* U.500 or bast offer. Duals.
Mags. 382-4043, ask for Bob.
FEED POTATOES, $30 PER TON.
652-1546.
HEREFORD COW WITH BULL
calf at toot and rabrad. 479-6983.
ISO HEAVY EQUIPMENT
and MACHINERY
FOR SArE FORD 5500 BACK-
hea. Phone 6S^3331, attar 4.
1975 TRANSAM LOW MILEAGE.
with extras, trades consid¬
ered 382-6346.
1974 TOVOTA CELICA AUTOMAT-
k, sun roof, 18,000 mllas $3410.
3#^70i4.
HD6G ALLIS CHALMERS
loader with ripper. 113-743-3005.
a-
W^ADILLAC ELDORADO. $300.
70 VW
69 MAZDA
67 COUGAR
68 MUSTANG F.B.
75 MGB
SHT")
$575
$ Offers
$ Offers
$ Offers
69 COUGAR CONV. $ Offers
70 FALCON 4 sp. $975
67 FALCON Auto. $775
69 INTERN. $875
74 FIAT 128 $ Offers
74 ’VETTE Conv’t. $ Offers
73 NOVA Auto. $ Offers
76 CORVETTE $ Offers
69 T'BIRD $1375
72 VW Auto. $ Offers
88 SQUIRE Wgn. $ Offers
71 VOLVO Auto. $ Offers
75 CAPRICE Wgn. $ Offers
73 PONTUC Wgn. $ Offers
n BEDFORD M.H. $ Offers
74 CORONA 4 Offers
72 VEGA Wgn. $ Offers
69 DODGE Moil $1175
70 TORONADO $ Offers
74 SR5 $ Offers
72 COLT Wgik $ Offers
73 COURIER $ Offers
71 COROLLA ■ $1175
70 MONACO $ Offers
68 CHRYSLER $575
73 GTO 4-8i)d. $ Offers
70 CROWN Auto. $ Offers
75 FORD Van $ Offers
76 CAMARO $ Offers
74 DATSUN 710 $ Offers
74 SPITFIRE $ Offers
68 MUSTANG S Offers
72 VW Bus $ Offers
73 AMX $ Offers
75 PONT. F.B. S Offers
74 SEBRING $ Offers
73 MG $ Offers
74 VE.NTimA $ Offers
75 CORVETTE Cdn.
$ Offers
74 MEXEOR Htp. S Offers
250 UNITS TO
CHOOSE FROM
BCAA INSPECTION
On Most Units
'71 Up
AND
REMEMBER!
NO REASONABLE
OFFER REFUSED
100 %
FINANCING
AVAILABLE O.A.C.
Open
9 a.m. -10 p.m.
CALL NOW!
m-m
Metro Toyota Ltd.
625 Finlayson
Dealer Uc. 00431A
McCallum Motort Ltd.
DOWNTOWN
j UOl YATES AT COOK
382-6122 Dir. Uc. OOSjOA
COLWOOD
1836 Island Highway
1478-1741 DU-. Uc. D-00830A
: COMPARE
PRICES
AND
COMPARE
CARS
74 VOLVO 4 dr., 6 cyl., fuel
injected, AT with
sunroof, air, AM-FM
radio, only 27,000 milea
$5996
75 GMC SIERRA, % ton
PU. AT, PS, PB, 7,000
miles $5395
74 MATADOR 2 dr., HT,
V-8. AT, PS. PB. radio
$3695
74 FORD Ec(3fK) Van, 6 cyl.,
AT $3895
74 DATSUN- B210 hatch¬
back, 4 spd., radio $3193
73 MERCURY COMET 4
dr.. V-8, AT. PS, PB.
radio $2895
73 SEBRING 2 dr., HT. V-8.
AT. p.s., p.b., radio $3295
71 COUGAR 2 dr.. HT, V-8,
AT, p.s., p.b„ radio,
vinyl root $3395
BANK
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
fiDails
OARS rOR SALE
IfhlAlTl
VOLVO
I
VOLVO
VALUE
DAYS
BEST
SELECTION
EVER!!
74 145 Wa^
fuel injected, radio, cus¬
tom rack, Michelins, dk.
blue, rich burgundy inte¬
rior. Hurry for this one
$5495
Cdlonitft Victoria, B.C., Sunday, August 22, 1976
ISO CARS rOR SALE IM CARS FOR SALE
fEMPRESS
Pfmtiac Btikk
ITD;_
12 Mon.-12,000 mi
Power Train Service j
Agreement Available
on the Majority of
our Used Cars
and Trucks!
D
0
U
6
I
A
76 MONTEGO Brougham
$5295
75 GREMLIN. Std. $2495
75 SKYHAWK. V-6 $4695
75 ASTRE H-Back, At. $3695
75 HONDA Civic $2795
75 MALIBU 4 dr.. A.T. $4795
75 CEUCA 4 Spd. $4695
73 145 Wagon
Automatic,
tion, radio
fuel
in.iec-
$4995
71 142 2 Door
4 speed. radiaJs, lach.
$3195
71 164 4 Dr.
6 cyl., automatic, power
steering, brakes, only
37.000 mites!! Dark
green, natural hide in¬
terior, an immaculate
motor car $4595
70 142 2 door
pwnplete motor over-
naul and service. In as
new condition $3195
WE FINANCE
NO INTEREST
Good or Bod Credit
SEPARATED, SINGLE
DIVORCED, MALE
OR FEMALE.
INSTANT DELIVERYI
BUY ond PAY
Some Location
mo. pgy. . ...
70 CHEV IMPALA. $SO0 down, 13
mo. pgy. of $a). F.P. $1330
68 METEOR Auto. SSoio down. 10
mo. pgy. of $80. F.P. $ 900
68 SKYLARK Auto., $300 down, 10
mo. pgy. of $60. F.P. $ 900
67 CHEV $300 down, I mo. pgy. of
$S0. F.P. $ 600
6$ COMET. 8300 down, 13 mo. pgy.
65 ?U?PiN^$i.. . .. ....
of $40. F.P. $ 550
61 AUSTIN Cgmbridgg. $125 down,
4 mo. pgy. of $40. F.P. $ 315
35 MORE
TO CHOOSE FROM
Instant
"NO-RED-TAPE"
Credit
Palm Motors
2936 Douglas
at Burnside
3H«I5 O40UI*
TOYOTA
1963 CONVERTIBLE CORVAIR
Monza 900. Rebuilt gngine, new
pxhaust, stsering, etc. Mechanical¬
ly very dependable. Wilt Include 3
additional same year Corvairs for
parts, good 9fc. Offers to
$550. Dennis, 593-3691.
'73 SATELLITE SEBRING 2
door hard top, V8 automatic,
power ^teerir>q. power brakes
33,0M miles. A1 condition, $3000.
477-J530.
SERVICE - PARTS
8 A.M. - 9 P.M.
MON. thru FRI.
Sot. 9 - 5
Brian Holley
Central
2 Blocks North of
Mayfair Mall on Douglas
384-1161 Dealer Uc. 00903A
75 LK MANS 4-Dr., At. M795
75 .CENTURY, 2-Dr. J4895
74 LE SABRE, Ht., At. J47M
74 VENTURA H-Bck. $3995
74 LUXURY LeMans $4595
73 CENTURY 4-Dr.. At
$3695
73 GMC 9i-ton $4295
73 JIMMY, 4x4 $5295
72 TOYOTA, At. $2195
72 FORD 94 P.U. $3995
72 CHEV, % P.U. $3995
72 PONTIAC Ht., Air $3295
72 CHEVELLE 2-Dr. $3295
72 DATSUN P.U. $2495'
71 LE MANS Wgn. At. $3095
71 BEL AIR, 3-Dr. $2595
71 FORD XLT 44, At $3695
70 POLARA 2-Dr.. At, $1896
. PONTIAC 2-Dr. At. $1695
68 SKYLARK 2-dr. Ht. $2095
68 LAND ROVER 4 Spd.
$3495
68 BEAUMONT $2295
67 FORD LTD.. At. $1795
^Vetpe)
You CAN EXpect
A Great Deal
From . . .
'73 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE.
V8, automatic, power windows, ra¬
dial tires. Excellent condltlw.
X.OOO mllas. $4,300. 3$60306.
69 CHEV. IMPALA S-DOOR
hardtop, power steering,^ powar
brakas, excellent condition, must
sell. $1,4(5, 595-7319.
MUST SELb 7) MUSTANGu IM-
macuiata, low milaaga. $2,900.
Phona 596-6333.
1966 FORD CONVERTIBLE GA-
laxia SOOXL. $600 or bast offer.
Needs new top. 476-1363.
1970 ROVER 3000 TC, 43M0
miles, show room condition, radio,
good spares kit. $3,000. 743-4046.
1968 CORTINA G.T. 4-DOOR
sedan, good conritlon, offers over
$500. 386-6652.
1965 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE,
389, near Classic, ottars to $1,300.
477 . 3 IS 6 or 384.5756.
'68 OLDS CUTLASS CONVERT-
ibia, naw top, deluxe modal, ax-
cailant condition, $1,350. X4.6688.
'66 METEOR FOUR DOOR Rl-
daau $700. 3843 Blackwood St.
386-7235.
'68 CAMARO 337, NEW MUNZtE.4
spaed, headers. 4 barrel, Edel-
brock mags, 386-1561
1968 FORD LTD. - ALL POWER,
new motor — otfara. 593-6775,
3S5-IX6.
1970 DODGE MONACO STATION
Wagon, air. tape deck, 73,000
mllas. $1850. 477-7386.
1970 FORD TORINO 4 DOOR, Au¬
tomatic, 351 Cleveland, good condi¬
tion. $1,300 or offers. 477-9775.
AUTOMATIC 1974 AUSTIN
Marina, naw condition, $2,900.
385-6)70 or 383-8561.
71 MATADOR, WELL MAIN-
tainad, 38.790 miles, 81,800 or bast
offer. 384-8895.
WRECKING 1968 FORD GALAXIE
500 fastback, glass, rebuilt 289.
haada and other parts. 479-9213.
MUST SELL 1970 AUSTIN MINI
Vatlonwagon. 598-3869.
1972 FORD AHAVERICK, GOOD
condition. $3400 . 385-7051.
1976 ACADIAN. OPEN TO
Offers. 995-5935.
YOU NEED
NO MONEY
100 Per Cent Bonk
Financing O.A.C.
CALL our finance MGR.
DENNIS GILLESPIE
For further information
CORNELL
CHEV-OLDS LTD.
3050 Douglas-385-57n
Dealer Licence D-006S1A
GREAT
SAVINGS
75 MAVERICK
,-Dr., m V.|, «uto. p.s.
Bargain Price $3695
75 CHEV IMPALA
V-8, auto., 4 dr. immaculata
Bargain Price $3695
75 PINTO
11X100 miles, 4>spd., Radio
Bargain Price $2,695
73 GREMLIN X
V4 Auto., P.S., P.B., Sharp.
Bargain Price $2,495
70 METEOR
7-Dr. ar.. Air - SURE* CLEAN
Bargain Price $1295
67 Toyota Crown
4-Dr., New Paint, runs graat
Borgoin Price $795
ALSO '
75 TRANS AM 400 auto.
74 TRANS AM 4S6 auto.
64 TRIUMPH Splffirt H.T.,
0-DrIve, tonneau
70 BUICK Wagon, air. P.W.
14 ft. BOAT, 40 HP motor and
trailer, new top
76 CORVETTE, Loaded
74 MGB, 17,cm mites. Bargain
74 MG MIDGET prlc^ raduc^
68 TRIUMPH GT6, 3S,000 miles
68 DATSUN Wgn. Auto.
MANY MORE
Many More
Used Cars;
Not Listed,
OPEN
MON.-THURS. 9-9
FRI.-SAT. 9-6
EMPRBSl
VOLKSWAGEN
PORSCHE
AUDI
CLEARANCE!
76 VW Rabbits,
Sciroccos, Audi
Foxes, Audi LS
DEMOS!
All Low Mileage
Units with Balance
of factory warranty,
and all radio
equipped!
PREMIUM USED
7 5 V W BEETLE
Bug”, Radio
“Sun
$3595
PonffacINIdq
382-7121
2867 DOUGLAS
AT TOPAZ
Dealer Uc. D01227A
HONDA.
car centre
NOW
CANADA'S
No. 1
SELLING SMALL
CAR
$3,276
Complete Victoria PricQ
BROKE STUDENT MUST SELL
1967 VW wagon, 1947 Chrysltr,
1961 Studebakar, 1961 Corvair
Monia. Tastad and running wall,
any reasonabla ofttr considtrad.
387-3097 or 479-9207.
DePape Motors Ltd.
itiO JOHNSON ST. 384-8033
D-00264A
MUST SELL, MAKE AN OFFER,
‘6S,Comat, powar staarlng, powar
brakes, automatic 2M VL good
rutl^nq condition. 3860256.
'73. FIREBIRD eSPRlT eIg
cellent condition, low milts, $3600.
656-1305.
1971 MAVERICK GRABBER. 6.
auto., P.S., good condition. Offtrs.
^**•707/.
73 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME,
many extras, good condition.
$3,900 . 383-8663.
1968 FORD LTD, BODY NEEDS
work, angina and trans, vary good.
$500. 302-7304.
V. VOL^WAGEN 411 STATION
Wagon. Ona owner. $3100. S9S-4471
or view at 1433 Gladstona.
1971 DATSUN STATIQNWAGON,
mKh^anically good, ntw paint.
1974 IMPALA CUSTOM 2 DOOR
hardtop. V8 lauiomatk. staarlng
and brakas, vinyl root, $3,000.
$52-3540. dl00094A. Suptr Motors
Ltd., SOS Douglas St.
, , ^ MUST SELL
'67 Cougar, good shapa, tastad,
©pan to bast oftar. 3»$-779l.
145 MUSTANG. EXCELLENT CON-
iditlon, new autometic transmission
and V8, $1,600 593-3S36.
1969 VAUXHALL VICTQR SEDAN
automatic, 37,000 mlias ona ceratul
ownar $785. Appointment to see
384-1731, 477-0$10 Sports Classic
Cars, 3835 Bridga. 6. 13451. _
'70 CUTLASS CONVERTIBLE,
full power AM-FM with* 8-track,
winter tires on extra rims, tx-
ceiiani condition, $2750 firm.
592-4337.
'73 FIAT 138 3-DOOR, GOOD CON-
dition, redials, tested till February
'77. $1,500 or offtrs. 4784336.
'70 VW BEETLE DELUXE. 40.000
mllas, 8-track, AM-CB radio, tast-
ad, axcellant condition, $1700, Oava,
653-4127.
'74 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE
with sat of atuddad snow tTras all
raasonabla ottars considarad.
478-5933.
1966 CHEV 4 DOOR SEDAN, V8
automatic, radio, tastad to '77,
runs pood, axcpUent transpor¬
tation. $240 ar gffgrs. 383-7662.
69 OLDS TORONADO EX-
cellant condition. 3I3-7617 attar 6
SELECT MOTORS
_ 950 YATES
383-8331_ 314.1332
1960 CHEV WAGON, 383 AUTO-
matic. air shocks. Inspactad,
pandabla, $395. 598-5511.
'75 HORNET X V8 ST WARRAN-
3)[562&.*-'
1960 VAUXt^ALL,
L4DW coBt bank financing
available on approved credit
for both Used and New
Cars.
1971 FARGO PICK-UP —
Spotless V8. automatic
custom canopy top. All
for the low price of
$2299
1972 MAZDA — 1600 sedan,
very clean, radio
equipped, economy car.
$1795
1974 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE
— Hardtop, and toft
top. Michetin tires. One
owner. $3295
1968 VOLKSWAGEN —
Spotless condition, se¬
mi-automatic. locally
owned. $1299
Handa Car Centre
Yates Qt Quadra
Dealer Uc. 846A
SPECIAL
'69 FURY III 321 Aut., F.S.. F.B..
^ good condition. HURRY,
N T B R MOTORS LTD.
04XI346A
1513 Quadra at Pandora SSSOin
75 VW RABBIT 2-door auto-
atic. radio $4195
75 ASTRE “Woody” station
wagon, low miles $3795
74 VW SUPER BEETLE 4
speed, radio $2695
74 VEimjRA Sedan, full
power, radio $3695
74 ITAT128 SL $2995
74 VEINTURA sedan. V-8,
automatic, pou'cr steer¬
ing, power brakes, radio
$3695
73 VW CAMPER. Propane
itove, fridge, and fully
equipped. 14,000 miles
$5196
73 FIAT 128 Coupe $1795
7 2 TOYOTA CORONA
4-door sedah, radio 4
speed <^$2295
71 DATSUN 510 sedan,
radio, extra clean! $1995
71 TOYOTA COROLLA 1200
Wagon $1695
71 BMW 1600,
condition
immaculate
$3495
71 VW WESTFALIA
camper. Fully equipped!
$4896
70VW WESTFALIA
camper. Fully equiK>ed$
$4493
69 CORTINA 2 door. 4
speed, radio, extra clean!
$1295
100 %
FINANCING
O.A.C.
SCOTIA PLAN
Douglas Volkswagen Ltd.
Porsche - Audi
3329 Douglas Street
388-5466
Dealer licence 00341A
1974 VOLVO 144, 4-OObR SEDAN,
automatic transmlsMon, AM radio,
Michalln radial tlraa. For paraonal-
izad sarvica plaasa contact Nick
Powgii at McCallum Motort. 1101
Yalta Strati or phono 382-6)23. At
home, 479-8391. DLO850A.
DO YOU NEED LOTS OF rSoMT
1971 Ponllac Stationwaoon, 9
atater, 350 v-8, Soptad aut^atlc,
pcwar sttering, powar brakea,
good condition. $3650, or near
oftar. 642-3969.
'7rCADlLLAC ELDORADO CON-
vartlble, all powar, air conditioned,
naw r^ial tiras, all whita, $6500 or
trada for W ton or ton truck or
landcruiiar. 643-3735. 6134 Sooka
Rd. _
1973 VOLVO STATION WAGON. 1
C ar. 43,000 mllai. Standard
ismiaalon. Root rack. 7 radial
Nraa. Sarwica racord avallabla.
yh‘8 car li In top condition. $4200.
656-32U._
1974 MAVERtClT^^OOdR'Te'DAN^
6-cylindar. aulomatic transmission,
powar ^rlng, radio, 31,000 mllas,
good all around condition, $2,500.
Phona 385-1739 after 4 p.m
tt71 OATSUN 510 3-O.R. 0
Black vinyl root, 4-spaad
radio, twin carbs, $9^ i
CAR SALES, 3333 Ot
385-413). D-00794A.
MUST SELL, '70 PO
Tampast, 3 door. 350 4 soeac
whaals. In axcallent stock
tlon,.U300 firm. 479-7446.
1969 OLDSMOBILE, VtP
mafic, power stearlng.
brakas, good condition.
477-8035.
66 MERCEDES
300 SEC
'n'miculata. Auto., air rida. Gold
Medalist. '67 Paris Auto Show. Ac-
capt otters $9,000-$10,000. 4«.7008.
72 TOYOTA CBLICA ST, RADI-
•Is. AM-^ radio, axcallent condi-
t'on- «400. Phona attar 5 p.m.
656-1907.
1971 TOYOTA COROLLA DELUXE
Station wagon, good condition. Ask¬
ing $1,500 or b«t oftar. 3834)025
anytima.
n DATSUN 1200, AUTOMATIC,
axcallent condition, 29,000 miles.
$1,754. P h ona evenin gs, 384-7340.
1967 CANSO SPORT DELUXE,
4-tpaad. Cragars, duet 4 barrel,
diamond tuff, new paint. 3I6-7646.
'67 FORD CUSTOM SCO, AUfo!^
axcellant condition, $575 or bast
otter. Call Joa avanlngs 477-7343.
ond cgr. 1971 Afiazda 61A $700. Gaa
saver. 3K-49n. or 479-1447.
1969 VOLVO. 144-$. 70-9$6S. MILL
Bay.
1972 lOYOTA COROLLA,
dard trans., 31 m.p.g., •>
condition, only 40,000 mllas.
at 477-9830.
•69 MUSTANG FASTBACK, V8
automatic, power steering, power
brakas, electric sunroof, must ba
SMP. $2400. 652-3160.
RELIABLE TRANSPORTATION.
196$ Ford Fairlana. Tastad. Fair
Cpnditoin. 385-8801, attar 4:30 p.m.
tt25^_
1969 CADILLAC, ALL POWER^
air conditioning, Mu# with black
vinyl top, good condition, $3,000 or
n aarast oH a r. 643-3546 att ar 6.
MUST SELL 1974 DATSUN~B2rd
hatchback, 5 naw paHiai *rra«
8-track stereo, 37^
o wner, ba st
1970 DODGE TuPE^R BEE.“440,~4
pack maos, headers, Highlackers,
aiactronic Ignition, posl-traction
raar-and, r ebuilt angina. 656-5063.
'66 CHEV. S.W.
M3 auto., radio, roof rack, $37$.
3t5-«95._
197$ CHEV. MONZA 2 PLUs”?,
Standard, v-8. many txfras. $4,100,
otters. 479- 8084.
1970 sTm(>' 1204 6LS CRACKED
head, good ter parts, otters. 1963
Hil lman, runs $135. 384 -9864.
W* STATION wagon'
14,miles, good condition. $3908
ONO. 477-3633, attar 6 p.m.
'63 PONTIAC AUTOAIVATIC $300
after S p .m. 384-^ .
1973 ASTRE. 4 ON t'he'fLOOR,'
radio, ntw paint, $1795. 477-3721,
ox SALK NOW
AT
ENSIGN
cars/
CHECKED
BY
Car Clinics
Diagnostic
Centre
GOV'T
INSPECTED
2-Year
Written
Warranty
6M
FINANCING!
O.A.C.
75 Mustang Grandt
69 Ford Galaxie
70 Volvo 144S
76 Volare Premier
72 Ford Ranch S.W.
75 Valiant
74 AMC Hornet
75 Nova
75 Bobcat S.W.
71 New Yorker
73 Monte Carlo
71 p\jry n
7o Valiant Scamp
70 Chev. Caprice
75 LTD Squire Wgn.
73 Austin Marina
71 Oirysler Newport
75 Pinto Hatchback
75 Valiant Duster
73 LTD Brougham
72 Chevy H
75 Volvo 242
73 Fiat 128
74 Galaxie 500
75 Gran Fury
74 Astre
75 Impala
73 Datsun 610
To Cricket
74 Crestwood S.W.
73 Chrysler Newport
69 Pontiac S.W.
75 Toyota S.W.
74 Datsun 610
74 Volkswagen
69 Acadian Beaumont
73 Barracuda
76 Valiant Custom
75 Pontaic Ventura
74 Otal longer
73 Toyota Corolla
72 Cortina UOOO
72 Ma:^ 616
72 Vega S.W.
7\ Satallite Regent S.W.
70 Mercury Marquis
69 Ford Galaxie
69 Olds Cutlass
ENSIGN
Chrysler-Plymouth
Ltd.
DOWNTOWN
YATES AT COOK
Dealer licence number
D495A
386-2411
Open Weekdays
Till 9:00
CARS FOB S.ALE
EXCELLENT
PRE-OWNED
CARS!
WE
REALLY
Come Through for
YOU!
i76 TRANS AM
14 speed
175 TRANS AM
I Auto., f’uil power
175 VENTURA
! Hatchback, full power
175 FORD F250
I Super cab, full power
74 BARRACUDA
Full Power
74 Plymouth Duster
Full Power
73 FORD FI00
V-8, Auto
73 SCAMP
340. Full power
73 COUGAR ’
V-8, Auto., full power
72 FORD Courier
PickHip
72 VW VAN
70 CHEV. 1/2 "Con
V.8, Auto., Radials
70 DART Swinger
340 Auto., Full Power
70 JAVELIN SST
' V.8, Auto., T\dl Power
70 IHC 4x4
69 COUGAR XR7
V-8, Auto., Pull Power
'69 CUTLASS 442
;V-8. Auto.. Buckets^ Full
Power
j "No Reasonable
Offer Refused"
!
j 2978 Douglas
i 382-9111
DLD-3790
t50 CARS FOR SALE<.
HOME OF
LINCOLN, MERCURY.
MONARai. METEOR.
MONTEGO, COUGAR.
COMET. BOBC.VT,
—^6 C\PRt n AND
FORD TRUCKS!
CAR.'S FOR S.4LK '50 CARS FdR SALE 1150 CAR» FOri SALE
150 CARS FOR SALE
j WAGONS WAGONS
' 75 TORINO Wagon, V-8. AT,
p.s., p.b. $4695
‘ 74 PINTO Wagon. 4 cyl.. AT
$3295
173 MONTEGO Villager
Wagon, V-8, AT, p.s..
- p.b,. Radio $31^
. 73 MAZDA RX Wagon, 4 sp.
' $2695
'73 PONTIAC Wagon, V-8.|
AT. p.s., p.b., R. $32951
71 VEGA Wagon, 4 sp. $1495]
69 COUNTRY Squire
Wagon. V-8, AT, p.s..
p.b., Radio $2395
74 ECONO 200 Van. V-8. AT.
19,000 miles $4495
66 DODGE Camper van.
equipped $1595
ASK ABOUT OUR.
EXTENDED
WARRANTY
YOU CAN
PUT IT ALL
TOGETHER!
AT
SUBURBAN!
76 COROLLA 2-dr., 4-spd.
$2995
75 TOYOTA COROLLA 4 dr.
auto., radio, 12 mos.
$3395
75 RABBIT 4 spd. $3995
75 TOYOTA PU. 2000 mi.
$3895.
74 'lOYOTA CORONA 4 dt
auto. $36^
74 A.STRE Hatchback $26%
73 CELICA 4 spd. Ia)w
miles. $3395.
73 DODGE VAN. cam-
perized $3195.
71 TOYOTA COROLLA S.W.
At $1995.
70 MAVERICK $1295.
68 TOYOTA COROLLA , ____ ,. .,
S1095. GREMLINS
AMC
CASH
REBATES!
$50 to $300
IN REBATES
ON ALL NEW
& DEMO
1976
86 VALIANT
S I
Saunders and
Mitchman
Soles & Service Ltd.
3040 Cadboro Bay Road
At Fort and Foul Bay
Dealer Uc. 0U566A
592-2471
WILLE
Has
SWINGER moterhomt
MINI Atotorltomt
VAN ConvtrsWn* from
74 DODGE Vi'ton Pickup
75 DODGE Mon Dump
74 BOBCAT Stn. Wgn.
74 MUSTANG GM*
73 CHEV imppla St. Wgn.
71 TOYOTA Pickup
61 CORONET Stn. Wgt>
69 VOLVO 3-doof
60 TOYOTA 4X4
OO VAUXHALL Victor
$J3.?50
$13,295
% 6,995
S 4,995
S 6,995
% 2,995
S 3.950
S 3,195
S 1.695
S 1,495
$ 1,695
$ 2,195
S 395
HORNETS
PACERS
MATADORS
BRAND NEW
/6 GREMLIN
FROM $3499
BUILT IN CANADA AND
THE U.S.A. FOR NORTH
AMERICANS.
COVERED BY THE AMC
BUYER PROTECTION
tPLAN.
I
! REG
M'IDGLEY
MOTORS LTD.
736 Cloverdole
385-8756
Dealer Lie. IXI0247A
HORWOOD
1 MAZDA
MIZER
I m
j 2 only company cars, radio,
low mileage and balance of
I new car warranty.
I DOWNTOWN
I 810 Johnson at Blauishaixl
" 383-1451
I Dealer Licence D-00803A
USED CARS
75 VOLKSWAGEN $3295
74 DATSUN 210 $2595
74 VEGA Kamback $3095
74 MAZDA 808 S.W. $3195
73 BUICK Cent. HT $3495
73 VW Super Beetle $2595
73 VW Super BeeUe $2595
71 TOYOTA Cm. S.W. $2495
71 VAUANT Duster $2295
71 MAZDA 1800 sdn. $1695
71 DATSUN 1200 coupe $1295
70 MAZDA 1800 SW $1295
69 MAZDA 2 dr. adn. $ 895
68 DATSUN S.W. auto $1195
68 BEAUMONT HT auto.,
P.S., bucket seata $2195
NO REASONABLE
OFTTEai REFUSED
COLWOOD LOT
1619 Island Hwy.
Across from Colwood
Farmers Market
478-8211 Dir. Uc. I>0126U
M<wi.-Fri. 9-9
Sat. 9-5
Many morp to chooM from
WIDE OPEN
UNTIL 9 P.M.
Monday to Friday
6 p.m. Saturdays
SUBURBAN
MOTORS
3377 Douglas St.
386-6131
Dealer Lie. 00863A
See
PLIMLEY
R|y A^rrisofl or Dovo Lanthior t
OPEN 9 a.m. to I p.m. Daily !
WILLE MOTORS LTD. I
Dir - D-13645 I
3240 Douglas at Clovardala ;
__3$2-2313_
1975 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT,!
.<t«luxe. raoio, 4 -spmo, i
11.000 mllas, totally mint condition.
$3750. Appointmant to sat. 3$4-l721, I
477-CS10. Sports Classic Cars, 2025
Bridgt. 013451.
©
1010 Yatw
3i2-0t21
73 PINTO Squire SW $2895
74 VW BEETLE $2895
70 MAZDA Wgn. $1395
66 CHEVY Caprice $ 995
73 MAZDA PU and Trav-L-
Imate camper only 21.000
jmiles. $4295
169 DATSUN PU and 74
I Camper $3295
166 VW BEETLE $995
‘ 65 BEAUMONT auto $795
ALL CARS CARRY
PRICE TAGS
im'e FINANCE O.A.C.
Bank oC B.C.
PAINTER
MOTORS LTD.
1513 Quadra at Pandora
74 SATELLITE Sebfina $27M
73 FIREBIRD, V-a, «ute. 03291
73 MERCURY RidMu wgn. $2795
^ASTRE Hatchback, Auto., $1795
73 CHEV Pickup $1995
{72 DATSUN Fastback 1200 $ 1*95
, 72 MACH I 351. leadtd *3695 7 , n.icTeo a
I 71 TOYOTA 1600 4 spMd $1^96;??
170 COUGAR A.T., P.S., P.B. ruc9 ? tiu
*9 FORD XL500 COnvt. ttiwZ* CHEV,. 9 ^ 00 $. S^W.
B. MADSEN
MOTORS LTD.
auto, p.s.
$3995
S3I9S
$3995
1969 CADILLAC ELDORADO. 19691
Metaor, 4 door, 302 angin»-«ood;
car. 1967 Mftaor Statlonwagon— ■
igood transportation. 1971 Pinto, 4
, soead—low mileage. 746-5950 Dun-
|Can.
P1^CED"fo"~s¥LL
1 1973 Thunderbird, low mileaoe..
feefher interior, power ootteru, •
plus air conditioning. Excellent all
rou nd co n dition. 05^. 306-1600.
THIS ONE MUST GO. 1974 CO-
rolla Coupe, excellent condition, 4
speed. 1200 engine, radio, good
tires, will sell at dealer wholesale,
$ta00 . 470-65 70._
1974 MAVERICK. 2-OOOR SEDAN.
6<viinder, standard transmission,
radio, raar window dafroster, on#
<wnor, tlOOO miles, excellent condi¬
tion. $2,950. Negotiable. 306-6909.
1964 CHEVY NOVA, CLEAN.
; tested, runs well, $455. Appoint-
•F r-wnw (wnin. SlBVa : 7 ,' o Ark'ai cVuArnBt a to See.- 304-1721, 4774)510.
:69 MUSTANG Grand# Auto. $1695'ZJ 5^nt^atfk®au*io ^ IwU Classic Cars. 2035 Bridge
69 OLDS 442, air 5^595 ,'J HONDA CMC, aulo. DL 0-13451.
69 CORONET Auto 2 dr. HT $1095 '
68 VOLKSWAGEN S 095 I U
]60 THUNOERBIRD, loaded $1995 ?? rI-Vu'
67 FIREBIRD 31 lltn <l7ec|71 VW Super Beetle
V;" '"r* triumph G.T. 6 Pius
[67 COUGAR Auto.. V-0
I 67 DODGE Polara
You Will NOT get
Better Value ANYWHERE
385-0122
D40346A
MEAN GREEN MACHINE
'60 Camaro SS, new engine, new
Mint, front and rMr apoiters, fibre-
glass cowl-induction hood, mags
and pro-tracs, air shocks, 12 bolt
posi, Ansen trKtion bars, disc
brakes, $2700. 745-3538.
1967 CHEVELLE MALIBU, a-cYT-
inder engine ovarhaulad, excellent
gas mllaags, new- paint iob only
one week old, Al condition; mov¬
ing, must sell. $1650. 470-9928, after
3 p.m.
s m 1 NOVA, 6, auto.
* ■’*'69 BUICK Skylark
I 69 TOYOTA Corona
73 G.M.C. Van, V-0 auto.
'65 FARGO window van
74 COURIER Pickup
74 FORD van
72 FORD ’/^»-ton, V-l. AT.
72 GMC '/^-ton, V-0. 4-spd.
CHEV MONTE CARLO. LOW
S2495irnileeoe. like new, $4,385. Appoint-
V^Vment to see, 384-172t. 4774)510.
If'Ji Sports Classic Cars. 2825 Bridge
$1495 DL 0-13451
$1695 ^
, SUPER
SUMMER
USED
CAR
CLEARANCE
1150 CARS FOR SALE
d
VICTORIA
DODGE
RYSLERl
ON VATES
NOW IS
Money Saving
TIME
The factory has announced
that 1977 units will be up 6
per cent plus a freight in¬
crease plus increased e.xcise
tax on air conditioning plus
weight groups.
VICTORIA DODGE
STARTS ITS
ANNUAL MODEL
CLEAROUT
SALE
Each undt bears our sales
invoice on the windshield
showing the LOWEST price
we will sell the unit at. Sav¬
ing^ at this price to what a
1977 will cost exceed $1,000.
OVER 200
CARS AND TRUCKS
to choose from
No Down Payment on ap¬
proved credit. Low bank
rate interest up to 60 months
if needed.
ALSO
DURING THIS
GIGANTIC SALE
All used vehicles have the
retail price tag on it and on
the dash is a price tag with
the lowest poesible selling
price.
THREE
POINT
MOTORS
"150 C.4RS FOR SAI.E
'l971 TOYOTA CORO*L L A ,
offers. 304-4020 after 6 p.m.
1971 2-DOOR PINTO, STEREO-
redlo. $1200 or best offer. 479-2133.
1 VAUXHALL, RUNNING
*35. 59 2-2102. __
1 T962^ F^NTIAC. $200, 6“STAN.
dard. 590-1604.
Merc»d«s-B»nx
DATSUN
ATTENTION
VAN
OWNERS
I Special clearout of our last
10 instant camper conver¬
sion units, both 8 ft. and 10
ft. models $595.00
Huge Price Reductions
YOTA C
74 BJ3ICK Regal,
75 TOYO
I’W VAUXHALL VELOX AUTO-
M^C 6 *D-R-.sej* 0 n. vinyl SMt&
n.«»,milM, $675. BAB CAR
Oougies, 3054121 ,
0-00794A.
'73 CORTTnA. 2 DOORri SPEED
trana, radiels, 6 wheels, radio,
hwy dHven. On# owner. $2,000
firm. 479^3101 after 6 p.m.
D.l; 13456
•//•viiv. oporis 1.11
Cars. 2025 Bridge OL D-13451.
2691 Sooke Rd.
478-5011 _
LEAVING TOWN—MUST SELL 197 $ TOYOTA CORQNA~r>Pi iixc ;
1967 Beaumont, sport deluxe, no wagon wa'ra ?2?ino and^wll
motor, new paint, mag wt^li, won't need a car. Also 1964 vw -
naw liras, *1^ . *i'®cks, new frwf Beetle, rebuilt motor. Call 642-3392 1
shocks and brakes, turbo 400 with anytime 1
eompetllion shift kit, Craig power--1
play, l-frack, haaders, new dual 1'66 METEOR WAGON; 9 PASSEN-'
exhaust, 12 -bolt posi plus LT-1 350, ger; just tested; naw paint; axteri-.
iust redone plus many extras. < or perfect; runs wall. $800. i
Must be sold. $2,200 or best offer.; 652-^900^_
470-0097 after 5 p.m._,CHEV IMPALA 2-DOOR HARD-;
1970 CHEV. IMPALA 4 .DOOR itop, automatic, S3H or bast efftr. |
hardtop. Power eoulpped. Clean Cifv_ jested until February 1977 .1
Coupe St. navy blue
$3295,
- - Silver, black
Uinyl roof $4495.
74 TRIUMPH TR6 tor tha sports]
enthusiast $4695 1
74 VEGA Hatchback, A.T., cream. I
12.000 mi. $2495
74 VW BEETLES $.T.. 1 green. I ,
orange. Clean economy cars
both $2695 -
74 AMC GREMLIN S.T. $2395
74 PINTO 2-dr. S.T. Bronze, very -
clean ^6951
73 COURIER P.U. $2095'
73 TOYOTA. A.T., wagon $2245 1
73 VW BEETLE S.T. $2295
71 VEGA Panel $ 095 '
71 VW. A.T. WAGON, yellow, low
mileaae $2095
70 MAVERICK 2-dr. S T. $1245
69 OLDS F05, A.T.. 2-dr., green
51200
$ 995 1973 FIAT 120 4 DOOR. 4 SPEED,
$2595 radio, 30,000 miles. Exceptionally
$1195 , clean. $1,535. Appointment to see.
$2455 304-1721. 477-0510. Sports Classic
$3$9S Cars, 2025 Bridge DL 0-13451.
<2495 --- - ___
$2^5 ’’ri PINTO SQUIRE .WAGON. Au¬
tomatic, radio, wall maintained,
Gi«n L.k, U'/IL, awSk “ J.'fSTiN IMO, good 74 CHEV Caprice, loaded.
WHERE
DEALS
ARE MADE
SEE
JOHN WOODS
-LOU LACHANCK
-ALLAN WOC»S
We Welcome
YOU IN
For a Test Drive
REMEMBER
3 years oil changes as per
manufacturers specifica¬
tions. No charge for all 1971
and newer models. Plus 30
I day 100 per cent power train
warranty on cars.
BEFORE YOU SIGN
ANY DEAL
SEE
THE* DEALS AT
VICTORIA
! DODGE CHRYSLER
ISIS YATES 384-8174
i Hours Mon.-Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9-6
Dealer Ucence No. D00867A
76 DATSUN 710
Automatic, fourdoor, lass than 200
miles, $200 less than ntwl
H775
76 DATSUN 6210
Hatchback, nicely equipped, only
1,600 miles, $400 IMS than ncwl
$3,995
75 TOYOTA,
I Corona^hardtop, autofnatic, radi-
I als, radio.
1 $3995
75 DATSUN 710
S^lal ..'’Witi with many extras,
7,000 miles.
$3,995
74 DATSUN 710
SriS5ob SI’S"*”''
03,095
74 TRIUMPH
SPITFIRE 1500
Radifis, radio.
03,795
74 DATSUN 710
Two-door, automatic, radio.
$3,495
74 COLT
Hardtop, automatic, 7,000 miles.
03,295
74 DATSUN B210
Two-door, vinyl roof, radio.
$2,995
74 ASTRE
Hatchback, 15,000 mliea, radiatt.
radio.
02,593
73 NOVA COUPE
Automatic, power steering, power
brakes, radio-tape deck.
03,495
73 DATSUN 610
Two-door hardtop, automatic, lest
than 6,000 miles.
$2,795
73 TOYOTA
Corona hardtop, less than 17,00
miles.
«2,79S
72 MAZDA
616 Sedan.
$1,095
71 VEGA
Kammback.
$1,695
70 MAZDA
Sedan, radio.
01,495
68 RAMBLER
Automatic.
•1.295
2620
GOVERNMENT
at HILLSIDE
385-6737
Dealer Licence D4K)74G A
TAKE AWAY 1963 STUOEBAKER
for cheap. 470-7630.
1962 PONTIAC 203 AUTOMATIC,
naads new rear and. S5D. 656G426.
151 SPORT, IMPORT CARS
BRICKUN
Collector's car. exctllant read car,
A-C. FM starao. Bast offer by
Soot. 1. Reply Victoria Press, Box
127 or call Calgary 246-4020, M
p.m.
. MERCEDES BENZ
1969 Model TXi, 4door aedan. Im¬
maculate. 69,000 miles. Lady driv¬
en. $3950. For appointment to
view. call T. McKenzie,
112-339-5574, days; 112-330-6S69.
evenings. No triflers please.
'74 FIAT 8PYDER, IMMACULA-
tely maintained. Fog lamps, rack,
radlals, custom rust proefinq.
Ansa exhaust. UMO miles $4,600.
3S6-9710.
1966 CORVETTE. COMPLETELY
Stock, new automatic, new tires,
exhaust, pelnr, hardtop. $4,050, will
take trade. OK Korrai, 1001 Holly¬
wood Crescent, 592-4132. or
306-7290. DL0970A._
1152 SUNBEJ^ TALBOT ALPINE
—2 door convertible excellent con-
ditl^, ro-upholstered, carpeted,
12,^ p. B. 0. Houlston, Box 343,
Alert Bay, B. C. VON 1A0.
112-974-5964.
1975 TRIUMPH TR6 IN Ex¬
cellent condition, white with blue
tntarior, tonneau. 7,500 milM, $$800
firm. Phone 3C34)4S4. Serious Inqui-
r es only. _
1973 MGB, excellent CONDI -
tion, new Michelins, shocks, ex¬
haust and soft top. $3500 firm. Call
479-4664.
1975 VOLVO. BURGUNDY, 15,000
miles meticulously cared for, will
consider older pickup in trade,
j 656-6233, no Saturday ylls.
! 197] ALFA ROMEO GT 1300 JUN-
lor, excellent condition, low niili-
age, extras, to view phono
477-5064.
SACRIFICE SALE
69 Datsun 1000 Sports, convertible,
must salt by weekend. 01450.
592-9)03, 595-6214.
1970 LOTUS ELAN SE4, ME-
chanlcs completely redone, 24,000
miles on car. No miles on new en¬
gine. Make me on offer. 595-6060.
72 A6G M1 DOft~ NEW PA IN t,
radlals, excellent shape, lust test¬
ed. Must be seen. $2,295 or best
offer. 5954302.
FORCED TO SELL 61 E TYPE
Jaguar Roadster, new paint, motor
rebuilt, $6,500 or bait efftr.
652-3064.
■69 MGB, VERY LOW MILEAGE-
Mechanically A-i. Body good. Just
tested. $1000 . 656-3569, esk for
Shant.
1975 MG MIDGET. 10,000 MILES,
repossession. First raasonabla
otter takes, phone days 470-9531.
evenings 590-1260.
'65 MG MIDGET. GOOD CONDI-
tlon, needs muffler, $1,500 or best
offer. Also '64 Anglia, parts or
whole, $100. 302-5039.
1976 ALFETTA GT WITH TAPE.
Only 2.000 miles and $2000 ender
list price, with balance of guaran¬
tee. 642-5509.
FOR SALE 1972 JAGUAR XKE
IVI2, hard top, standard transmis¬
sion 28400 miles $9800 or c^ers.
Phene 477-4044 afttrji:30._
jim MGB. EXCELLENT CONDI-
tlofl. Michelln X radlals. radio,
only 34,000 miles. Sacrltlca, $2500.
I 303-5427. _
I 1973 PORSCHE 911S, RECARRO
(Seats, stereo, electric sunroof, tint-
;ed glass, new Michelins, Immacu-
j late. $12,300. 477-0 710. _
f>70 MGB, EXCELLENT CONdV
ton, i4 race engine, recently ra-
#jilt, many extras Including new
roof. $2.5M firm. 4774529 . _
1966 VOLVO, EXCELLEn't“mi 6V
and interior, needs some engine
work. $800. 477-9639.
Dealer Licence 572A
hardtop. Power equipped. Clean
and wall maintainlM, $1185. Ap- : 3854479.
pointment to see. 304-1721. 4774510. LncTAw/'—
UL oonrt r..,»nin. order, oftefs)
*’<'« inej. air
j 73 FtREJBIRD.
New paint
$4296
Equipped.
S3995
MECHANICS SPECIAL
,07 Dodge Polara 500 310 Eng. Stan-1
.. I B/ CXKIVC rWBf» JVU .»'• ow. ' ,7,» A I ir Tati <aaa . at.
mrlSpXLA FOUR DOOR. M7 ?eXi5*Ur.cT'f Som/ r«.T i % A ««»■ "•* '''“i
•nain* A linA .lll'ce./I. some repairs 'Oi^oeds soma work, $1000 or basf
- .oiler. 656-2053.
_ 1969 JAVELIN. 6-CYLINOER,
70 PLYA60UTH spoVtc^cup v’ Standard shift on floor, naw paint,
JSonVi.'i'iJ.'i m attractive 2 tone
b,twMn,.7. „„ POOR, way. BEL AIR, j—j blue and white S29ftj
112-743-2005.
CHEVROLET
- j 72 OLDS CUTLASS B. 2 dr.
•orJif'on' ow^^'oood'^ondUion, i ® *UtO., P.S.. B. radio.
.onClIOn. A..-,... --'(cv_:_u-j
EL~cWN6"^7“3-SPFFnt«»»0"'»»«c”2^ ';?dl5*puA?.rtl. ^
.tK. 327 3-SPEEDjf.ii,ftt funnmo condilicm. TastAd.quarts II
must be seen. raasAnAnl* nfUrA "SKtng SSV S. w 4^.
CADILLAC COUPE DE
must be seen, reasonable offers ^
considered. 384-3017. '1970
radio, quarts lights, lust test -'07 cv-\Dr\ 1 -rrv j j tifi-
excellent condiTten $1995 or FORD LTD 4 di. HT.
ed.
I neerest offec, 470-3270 or 470-2479.
PLUS MANY.
MANY MORE
m.'MUST GD back TO SCHOOL,!
KAO* 4« ..II iat 5 p*ter, excellent'
let go at $3900.
4794000.
71 Rolls Roycej
Silver Shadow!
4 DR.. V*8 auto., p.s., p.b.,t
p. seats, a 1 r conditioning, j
cruise ccHitrol. P. windows.!
power door locks. Immacu-|
late, extremely well cared |
for. History on Request.
DePAPE MOTORS i
LTD. 1
760 JOHNSON ST. 384^361
£M)0624A I
73 CHALLENGER. Equip-
ped. Vinyl rcxrf $3895
73 MALIBU 2 Dr. Coupe,
New paint $2^
72 VAUANT Cuda, Equip¬
ped. New paint $3495
71 SKYLAte 2 Dr., Equip¬
ped, Qean K495
! 310 BAY 383-8302
71 MUSTANG. Equipped,’ cars at lowest prices
mags.aean _' "
70 M ■.li bu
Equipped, Clean $2495 wagon, we're moving end wa
won't ntM a car. AIm 1964 VW i
68 CAMARO 400, 4
ARTS CAR SALES
D-OO206A
MOTORS LTD.Z—
sQOOD '
AUDI PareBCHE
VOLMMXSKN
CLEARANCE OF
1976 DEMOS
AT DEALS THAT
CAN'T BE
BEATEN
'72 TR6, 43,000 MILES. ASKING
$3,0 0 0 . Exctlltnl condition.
5 95-7671 ._
PRIVATE — 1972 TR6. $290o7
Trades considered. Cart ba fin-
^^_^0-^14^_ _
(1973 FIAT 124 SPORT. GREEN
interior, 41,000 milea. $2,900.
479^947._ _
I69"mg'b. radTal’t7rbs~ton-
I naau covers, excellent condition,
i * 3»100 or offert. 471-3097.
'66 CORVETTE HARDTOP CON-
vertible. 427, 4-speed. $5,000 firm.
479-7705.
175 200 Z, 16J)00 MILES. EX-
.ceiicnf condition, $6900 . 658-5653,
lifter 6.
'73 Toyota celica st.
4-speed, new radlals. Excallent
co ndition. $2300. 3834897. _
79*74 MG MIDGET 1000 MILES
new trans, naw michtlln tires, like
new, 596-7004. _
tV1 MGB, EXCELLENT CONDI-
> tIon, new Michelins, Stereo, over-
drive, $3000. 4774721.
'69 MAZDA 1200, STANDARD
motor, tested, good shepe. $795.
303-7115, 14.
74 FIAT 128 STATION WAGON,
excellent condition bost offer.
304-9118.
I '72“pLYM 0UTH CRICKET. ECO-' at*\5Min'’^A®^ * r &' '■
notnlcal 4 cylinder, automatic, ra-^^jV^L condition will li
dials. 15.000 carefully driven miles, ^ 11 ™:_' .
$1600. 3 03-1907._^ 1970 A6AZDA 1000. LADIES CAR.
1900 CORTINA AUTO.
SEDAN, Radio, 0771. B 4_
SALES. 3233 Oouolea St., 305-4121,
ITO ''"^Tro" 9®^ condition, only *1,000' miles, I
'TO. 2-D.l^ Dower 305-3710 A sk ing $1,000 wagon, 310 V4, PB. Radio, heater.
B 4fc B CAP 00*'**^- Awing »i,vuw.-Excellent
1976 GRENADA 8 DOOR HARO-
too, V8 automatic, powar steerinq
and brakes. $5500. DL00079A. 2524
Douglas Street. 592-3540.
1969 VW KNOTCHBACK RECON-
condition. 743-5434 Mill Bay.
1960 TOYOTA CORONA DELUXE
_ ,4.door. Automatic. Radio. Good
1970 PONTIAC PARISIENNE. 350 condition. Leaving country, must
V0, PB, PS, auto., excallant condi-'sell. Best offer. 384-4306.
tion, 39,000 miles. ^0^5.- sale. 1972 VW BEETLE.
1971 TOYOTA C 0 R 0 L L A , I roof rack, radio, snow tiros, ax-
4-speed, 48,000 miles. Il.ixi or besticeiient condition. $1950. Please call
. '750-3115 (Nanaimo).
Dark blue. Good older car
$ 895.
75 VW RABBIT. 4 cyl., 4 spd i
with radio. Finished in
green $3896.
65 OLDS 2 dr.. HT. V-8 auto.
P.S. Finished in blue $ 795.
71 CKEV % ton PU, V-8
auto. Mechanic’s special
$1995.
mags
67 CAMARO. V-8,
Qean
$2795
anytime.
HERTZ RENT A CAR HAS CARS
0 _J Ifur s«l6, save apcrox. S300-$60Q
6 S|)eeu, lot prices. Call In at 901
$2496 Douglas Si. or phone 300-4411 for
more information.
1975 BUICK CENTURY WAGON.
PS, PB. radial tires, low mileage,, .-sueeD «auuu
excellent condition. $5,250. 383-7913 lo«S” 306 - 209 L
or 306-7643. I ■ ---- -
„-T v> --' K.ecr.c * ,-,s,v,v RANCHERO GT. ex(:ep-I'67 ACADIAN CANSO 283 Milistream Chevrolet Ltd.
MADGE, NEEDS A GOOD HOME, tionil condition. n,000 milea. Most haaders, 4 berrel. mags, bucket i t j u
4-d«r Corolte and she s {oxiras. 4/9-2526. iseats. no transmission $M lirm.l i7»/0 Island Hwy.
taking up park ng apace i need for ' ■ ' _ - - - - . 179.5424
my new MG. Cell mZHsS ; BUICK WILDCAT 4.000R., -
-/ -, all power, excellent condition, $050.‘1971 BUICK SKYLARK, 4.DOOR
66 MERCURY PARKl^NE, slQffers. 592-1044. | 6 <vllnder. -'7,000 miles, new trans-
474-1211
Dealer Uc. D01384A
1970 FORD MAVERICK 2-DOOR,
aulomattc, new tires, see greert
{door hardtop, vinyl roof, p.s.. o.b.. en*! carburetor. Immacu-
290 HP. needs a ilttl# work, $500, -VW (CUSTOMIZED) AAAGS. ETC,, ,iate. $2,900 or best otter. 477-1035
992-9451. ,must be seen. Phone Gary al -■ - - --—. —,
--- - 282-8034. I960 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER, with black inferior. 11,495 or best
68 CHEVELLE. REBUILT'„ — -- — •—i7*oli«v 4-barrel, verticle gate. dual.offer. Must be sold this week,
moior, can pt seen. Midas POR SALE: ^ 1969 COUNTRY'poim, headers, phone after 6.'470.5814 or 595-1121.
Muffler, Douglas St. during oav or ;squir# Ford station wagon. Otters. 112 . 743 - 4007 . -
call 995-5509 attar 7:30. Offers. 2£5-5n8. -—-. -- PRIVATE '74 MATADOR SW,
We Also Hove
-COMPACTS
—VANS
-TRUCKS
Trade Up or Down
Bank P'inancing O.A.C.
382-7195
E5QUIMALT
AUTOMART LTD.
480 Esquimalt Rd.
£M)0SS56A
.MECHANIC'S STEAL: '7l OAT-
sun station wagon, radio. 61,000
miles, needs valve lob. 1790. Mike
! Sweeney, 304-012A _
•BUICK LESABRE 2-DOOR HARD-
top, automatic, power steering,
power brakes, new Radlals.
477-7040 aft^ 6 P.m.
[ONE OWNER, I960 COLONY
I Park 9-pessenger station wadon,
all power equipped. 60,000 miles.
'$1,000. 592-2142 . 3060 Uplands Rd.
MOVING, MUST SELL '67 COU-
gar GT, 4 mags, automatic, air
shocks. Excellent coridition. $1795.
; 508-0233.
'71 MERCURY COLONY PARK
I station wagon, with many options.
S9S42a after 6.
WEEKEND
SPECIALS
1970 Datsun 510
2 Dr. Automatic
Under 20.000 miles!
$1595
1971 'Vega
Economical, gtandard
trans.,
under 34,000 miles
$1495
1972 TRANS AM
455 — automatic, offers to $4,000.
305-2022 or 305-2236.
DATSUN SPORTSCAR, NEW
roof, paint iob and rebuilt motor.
477-2460. _
l'96) MGA HARD ^TOP.'fON-
naau, new paint must sell best
offer. 479-6154.
1974 FIAT 124 SEDAN AUTO-
mafic, excellent shape. 595-0099.
4-7 p.m.
70“>ufTpYDERT RAWoTrVdi-
als, 57,000 mllas, asking $2400.
590-^._
1969 TRIUMPH'”GrT7~6 pCuS,
very good condition, $2,500.
47742)0.*
MUST SELL, '69 TR6, IMAAACU-
lata condition. Must be seen. BY
a ppointment only 59 8-7107 . _
1974 FIAT X19, LIKE NEwT^AG
wheels, stereo cassette, steel belt'
ed radlals. $4350. 303-3732.
1971 OPAL GT TOP CONDITION
this unique sporty automobile mutt
be sold, open to oHers. 590-4319.
'69 GRAND PRIX 400 C.C. ALL,
power. Only $1675. 2653 Prior St.
3024600.
WEEKEND
PRICE
Challengers
'70 BMW 2002, EXCELLENT
throughout. $3,900. 470-0044.
!i974 mg MIDGET, 18,000 MILE'sT'
i radio and fog Itmps. S90-893p .
MUST SELL
1964 Chevy II Nova. 2-doer sedan.
6 standard, runs good. $250, or__
__ _ __ __ , besL3U-9496._ LEAVING FOR -EUROPE. '7$ 75 VALIANT 4 Dr. AT. $3895
1973 ASTRE HATCHBACK. NEW POSsengefS. roof rack, 31.COO milts. 1972 DATSUN 1600 SEDAN. ONLY i
■“'**** •’— tape deck, good , otd#r^_ car as part payment. 29,000 miles, new tires, solid trans- . __
_ _ __ portatlon. $1,900. 656-70»>. _ _ MATADOR BROUGHAM.
(,« PONTIAC STATION WAGON i;n COUGAR XR7 CONVERT-
’FfHv 1 urdav, 5-402 Chester Ave. bast offer over $30^ 305-7957 any- sft-iiSi --
1970 FIAT SPYDER 124. MUST
self $2000 or offer. 314-9064.
I-’
BILL CARTER CARS ltd; I’W V'Yt *275 B :b«ifed ' lire's, -k- -trvk. ™ *
, 2530 Government, 385-1716 A B CAR SALES. 3233 Douglas, condition. OHars to $1,000. 479-3280. '476-3380.
Large selecttorsof economy cars 305-4121. 0-00794A. i- — — - -
- --I
477-0303 or 479-1039.
1970 CHEV. STATION'wag'on;
, tested until March 1977, $1,595.
'73 TOYOTA LAND CRUISER,
winch, new tires, 656-252$ week¬
days after 5 p.m.
1974 TOYOTA WAGON. SMART,
economical 21,000 one owner miles.
$2,750. 080. 470-4029.
1H7 BUICK WILDCAT Y DOOR
hard top, full power, windows etc.
$600. 316-3650.
MORRIS MINOR CONVERTIBLE,
running condition, otters. 592-0071
afftr^^SO._^
I960 DATSUN 510 4 DOOR, SAFE-
ty inspected, new paint, good acon-
omy vehicle. 477-3817. _
'61 VAUXHALL VIVA, Aufo;
mafic, tastad, food condition. $ 000 .
479-<2l5.
IUNDER8IRD, 2 DOOR
. 00 ^ condition, $1,M0 or
ar. 656-5263 fter 3 p.m
5TANG, REBUILT TRANS,
I tufted Interior, immacu-
500 or often. 3M-3708.
1974 TOYOTA - COROLLA. 13,000
mllH. 03.400. m-S32V
64 VW BEETLE, EXCELLENT
condition. Very raliabit. Otters on
$1,000. 650-5163, ask for Mark.
MOVING, MUST SELL. 6S
Chrysler, clean, runs wall. Offers,
to $400. 306-1603.
60 TOYOTA COROLLA, ENGINE
rebuilt, brakes reilned in Sep¬
tember 75. Asking $750. 477-3174.
1969 CROWN IMPERIAL
Chrysler, ewy option, premium
condition, of^. 3834339.
1976 BRONZE, HONDA CIVIC
hatchback. 10400 miles. Asking
83.300 . 595-3617.
1969 CHEVELLE. NEW MOTOR,
excellent condition. Asking Price
$3,300 or bast offer. 383-4972.
'70 OTO. 400, TURBOHYDRO,
Many extras, must be seen.
471-2464.
low mileage, phone 656-3531.
1950 VAUXHALL, EXCELLENT I
time.
■4, COMET Vi AUTOMATIC, JIH, 'cMNlllijr, il,«0 Of IrMt lor truck. !LADIES 197, VEGA. K-Obo MIUeY,
Comet V0 automatic $200. iM.ee,-> •urellepit rKn,4lltj>n
1971 CORTINA GT 2-DOOR,
radios , one owner $1400. 592-6490.
I960 PONTIAC AUTOAAATIC, $895
or cloefSt offer. 598-8604.
excellent condition, automatic,
radio, ate. $2690 or boot offtr.
477-1403„ between 4 and 10 p.m.
I960 MORRIS OXFORD, TESTED,
fair conditon. Motor good. $I7S. -
590-179). 1973 DATSUN 1200, EXCELLENT
/-nil ' A7i'-r'n>*ATiy -'t ^v,i Condition, owner moving
jUg^j 4 condiloo. $1200. $1150 or nearest offer. 5904070.
'50 METEOR. NEW PA»NT. INTE-
rior, mostly stock conditon, radio,
tasted till Aug. 77. 1416 Fairfield.
las. $1,600. 306-1004.
^1925. Evenings. 479-5405.
'60 BUICK, ONE OWNER. 8950.
304-0064.
70 AMC REBEL SST WAGON,
standard 6, 1 owner, must sell, ax-
celiant conditon. Oners. 4^.433/.
1966 CHRYSLER 300, 4 DOOR,
hardtop, buckets, power steering,
power brekes. radio, 3044955.
1973 VOLVO 164E. AIR CONDI-
tlonlng, leather seats, 40,000 milea,
$4,400 . 479-4947.
» CHEV. STANDaVo”STRAIGHT
SIX. $200. after 6 p.m. 303-3061.
1967 PONTIAC, 3 DOOR HARD-
top, VI, automatic, iust tMted.
$700. 477-9324, 4774949.
1955 VOLKSWAGEN 1600 CC,
mags, wide ovals, $1100 or otters.
590-7810.
iON.^E)
1970 DATSUN WAGON. ^^EX-
caliant running order, fair condi¬
tion $1195. 477-1550.
67 COUGAR. NICE LITTLE CAR.
209 automatic, radlals. 470-ci^
478-0429.
'53 BUICK CONVERTIBLE
____I New too, new wide white tires, to-
1969 CADILLAC 4-DOOR Haeh. rebuilt engine. 593-3440 ,
power. Immaculate.
1973 DATSUN 610 STATION
wagon, 40,000 miles, axcalleni run-
ning c ondttton, $2,79$. $90-4 46'4
W74 DODGE CHALLENGER.
15,000 miles, axceilent condition.
Must be seen. 3034731
1 OWNER, 1971 DODGE DEMON,
6 cylinder, lute., like new, $1,950.
470-1450.
j $100. Must be seen to be epprecl-
'69 ACADIAN NOVA, 3-DOOR, tttd. 593-9466, 20B3 Camtrven.
41400 mites, 0I4SO. 3034040. ■- -r-
---I '50 STUOIBAKER «LVER
1967 DART TESTED TILL FEB- hawk, $1500 or afftrs, 69 Linden
ruarv '77 offers. 5695-3)45. I Avenue.
STRAIT MOTORS LTD.
1513 Quadra al Pandora
100 "Reasonable rates'
'73 TOYOTA CELICA, 40,000
miles. radlals. compiatelY
•quipped. $1,000. 471-6360.
MUST SELL! '74 HONDA 350XLr
good ahape. $000 or offers. Don
Grant. Box 6i. Mayna Island, B.C.
1970 VIVA STANDARD, 4.DOOR.
very good condition. $^. 4774035.
'71 DATSUN 1200 FASTBACK,
vinyl top. 0 track. $950. 590-7734.
'73 CUTLA5 $. POWER STEER-
Ing, brakes. $3099 or offers.
3024160.
60 CORTINA GT, 1600. 2-OOOR,
4-speod, radio. $695. 470-493) affar
5 p.m.
FOR SALE, 1969 FIAT HARDTOP.
Must ba sold, wh^ offers. 593-76W
or 382-1510.
FOR SALE: 1960 CHRYSLER
Newport hardtop. Must ba sold,
what offars. 593-7680 or 383-1510.
'60 SKYLARK. 2-DOOR SEDAN.
$1,300 or closest offer. Must be
s^. 652-3324. _ \ _
'66 BEAUMONT 2 DOOR HARD-
too, 4-6peed, mags and Radlals,
.*^-5619.
$000 or offers. 479-5
'67 VW BUG, 2ND CAR. TESTED
till July 77, $400 firm. View at
Dallas Road at Mom Straadt
'54 HUDSON HORNET RAcTnG
mbtor. Partially rastorad. Offars.
592-4349.
1974 DUSTER 4 SPEED 360 4
bbi. PS. pb, radio, low milaae«.
749-3556 collect.
MUST SELL 66 FAIRLAINE
900XL 390 automatic. Phene Steve
470-7046.
74 FIAT 128
70 VW Wagon, AT.
73 MG Midget
70 VW Fastback At.
62 VW Camper
72 VW Beetle
$2135
$1895
$2695
$1695
$ 895
$1595
j72 FIAT !24. $^ OR 'BEST
offer. 365-5200.
DOWNTOWN
971 Yates Street
at Vancouver
Dealer Licence No. D-004S6.^
385-2415
'60 CORVETTE. PANEL TOP. 327
4-spetd. good condition. 470-7702.
I5t TRUCKS. BUSKS
and VANS
!969 OLDS fORONADO EX-
celient condition, trade for truck
end camper or van. 303-7617 altar
6 p.m.
1975 DODGE VAN. PARTIALLY
camoerizad, 6 cylinder standard,
5.000 miles, excellent cendi-
tion, $4750. 305-6026.
'69 VOLKSWAGEN CAMPERIZED
van, rebuilt motor, gat heater,
$1295. 595-1141.
1976 DODGE TRADESMAN 100
van, 3400 mllas. Matai shelving.
Extension ladders. 3824091.
1970 3SIC A6ACH I. EXCELLENT
condition, $3000 or offers. 470-36S4.
<1965 SINGLE AXLE GRAVEL
{truck. Phone G. Ral, 386-3464. O.K.
Trucking Co. Ltd. _
1'1972 TOYOTA HILUX. EX-
celient condition, low mileage,
with canopy. 4704105.
1970 Ford 3 ton, S and 3, 90e du^
'bar. 1973 GMC H ten 4-epeed
1477-7436.
TRUCKS, BUSES
and VANS
THREE
POINT
MOTORS
Mercvdes-Benz
DATSUN
TRllCKS. BUSES
mud VANS
74 TOYOTA
HILUX PICKUP
Mirrors, radio Was $3,595
Now $3,395.
74 DATSUN .
Automatic Pickup, ^^■as
$3,395
Now $3,295.
72 FORD
COURIER PICKUP
Canc^y, heavy - duty bump¬
er, radio, $2,095.
2620
GOVERNMENT
at HILLSIDE
385-6737
Dealer licence D^)0740A
ENSIGN
AND
RECREATION
VEHICLE
CENTRE
m? WILLYS JEEP CJ-2A-4X4,
n»w convertible too end oeint lob,
rebuilt trenemission, end trenefer
CMC. new clutch, flywheel and
preseure ptate, brand new Dana 44
rear end, 11“ brekts, all new
wheel cylinders, new 8“ chrome
reverse wheels end Desert Doe
tirM, stock 4-cyllnder motor, loeks
and runs really good. Also stock
whsels and tires and steel top.
$3,500 or bast otter. Phone Nianel*
mo. 758*2673.
JEEP CITY
JEEP
CASH REBATES!
J50to$300
ON AU. NEW AND DEMO
J976 JEEPS
DEAL NOW AND SAVE ON
JEEP CJ5’6. CJT's. HON¬
CHOS, CHEROKEES, WA-
GONEERS, TRUCKS!
Reg Midgley's
JEEP CITY
3342 OAK ST.
ear Tosn and Country
Shopping Centre
i
385-7571
Dir. Uc. O0247B
QUADRA
AT
CALEDONIA
GOOD
NEWS!
From Your
DODGE
TRUCK
SPECIALISTS
TRUCKS. BUSES
and VANS
Colont0t Victoria, B.C, Sunday, August 22, 1975
I leo PARTS. ACCESSORIES 168 CA.MPER8. TRAILERS 1 168 CAMPERS. TRAILERS 168 CA.MPER8, TRAILERS 166 MOBILE HOMES 166 MOBILE HOMES
TRUCK TRAINING
A'NO AIR BRAKE
COURSES
IN NANAIMO
SAFERWAY
DRIVING SCHOOL
PHONE 756-3421, NANAIMO
CAR STEREO
In-desh AM*PM eterao redio with
cassette or i-track player from
$149.95 Installation available.
B.C. SOUND & RADIO SERVICE
931 FORT 383-4731
Mid MOTOR HOMES
and MOTOR HOMES
OPEN NOW
Coma and aaa Victoria's largest
atock of Hi-parformanca autoi
acceasoriat and parts.
Aton.-Frl >-». Sat. til S I
D. G. AUTO I
g44 Douglas 3|2-4fl2'
1974 F350 I ton, steal dump box,
baby duals 20,000 miles, good land¬
scapers unit, clean, good condition
asking only $4^. ^
11973 F350 1 ton 14' aluminum van
' box, baby duals, 30.000 miles,
dean $4450. Call 477-5113, 9-5,
592-0402 aner^S P-m- ___
1 OWNER ^ ,
1972 GMC >4 ton Camper Splaclal
Pick-Up with only 38,000 miles plus
9'-V 1972 Security Camper. This
package unit Is In mint condition.
For personal service phone Cha-tie
Peterson now at Empress Pontiac
Buick GMC Ltd., 3n-712l or resi¬
dence 592-0458. dL01»7A.
ARE YOUR SPRINGS
I ADEQUATE?
iWa sail and Install DENDOFF
Overload and halpar springs lor all
cars and trucks. Including Import
models. Phone 384-0313. LOGAN'S
R.V. SERVICF CENTRE, 49
I Burnside East, near Douglas.
CHEVROrET a4.r®N^ 1960^,
checker plate bumper for step
side, four-speed transmission, beti-
houslng for V8. 437 Chevrolet
heads, and manifold with q-iel.
477-3405.
DELUXE CHEVY VAN
VI auto. Less then 20,000 on new
engine. New tires. Chrome rims
and hubs. 8 track. FM. Cassette
quad stereo. Insulated. Panelled
and carpeted throughout, lea box
and bunk, consioer older VW In
good running order as trade to
U^. 3830324. _
'57 W-TON FORD 390 4 -SPEEO, 4 -{74 TOYOTA Pick-UD
barrel, tape deck, custom interior,L,
new clutch, tires and shocks, 74 TOYOTA With O.K.
cedar canopy complete trailering pamj^r
equipment. Runs and looks creet. v-anvjH*r
$ 1800 . May trade tor older van! 73 DATSUN Pick-up
...K -M4.-J71B KARGO 1-Ton P’Jat Deck
plus cash. 384-2^18.
JI FORO A ton Ranqer V-B, Auto.,
P.S., P.B., Camper special,
dual tanks ate. $3995
72 FORD ^ ton, V-8. Std. $3695
S. J. PEOEN LTD.
3855 Quesnel St. 386-3444
p-13432;
'7^ FORD F400. EXCELLENT
truck for moving or deliveries. 18'
aluminium box, recent full tuneup
and new tires. G.V.W. 20,000 lbs.,
54,000 miles, In immaculate shape.
Call 4S24128. ___
1973 LANDCRUIS^R
Warn tock-o-malic hubs, winch,
heavy duly rear bumper, treiler
hitch, roof rack, skid plates, bush
grill. A good buy at $4,200. or
nearest offer. 478-7866. Call after
4^00_p.nfV_
197(I~6hEV window VAN, CAM-
periled, well insulated. HD trailer
hitch with electric brakes, 4<vL
auto, good gas mlieaga. Weil
maintain^. Phone 595-15U, after
4. _
65 FARGO Pick-up
62 INTER>^TIONAL
Travel AR
13' TRAVEL TRAILER, PRO-
K sne stove. Ice bo)k chemical toi-
!t, spare wheal, sleeps 4, good
condition. Asking $1,000 or closest
offer. 642-5474, lO t.m. to 4 p.m.
Call 442-3441.
RETURNING TO UNIVERSITY
Almost new fully warranted 1975
Mazda pick-up with homemade
canopy, red outside. Interior black.
6,300. Asking $3,900. 596-337^
1974 4X 4 FORD PICKUP. SHORT
Wheel base, Bala racer, roll cage,
bucket seats, 360, power staarlnq,
4200 miles. Must be seen .748-3493
or 7484)710.
'74 FORD ai-TON, 360 V-8, AUTO.,
power steering, power brakes, two
tanks, rbdlo, back bumper, 37J)00
miles, $3975. 3810 Dean Ave. be-
hlnd 1894 Townley. 5^7694^_
1976 FORD CLUB WAGON, TINT-
ed glass, heavy duty heater, 351
automatic, radio, 12 seals. Good
for a large family, camper or
business. Asking $6,800. 598-3491.
carpets. Mrack, many new parts.
$3,500 or will trade tor van or car
and cash. 598-3044. _
1973 Xk TON FORD, 1975 CUSTOM
made lOVb' camper, 3-way fridge,
slova, oven, queen size bunk, hv-
drauilc lacks, $4,800. 38S-2491 after
5 p.m., weekdays.
1966 r NT«NAT lONAL «U-TOn 7
4-sDead, 7.50x16 split rims, heavy
duty truck. Radio. Good shape
with canopy. $900 . 386-9772. _
'71 MAZDA PICKUP, 38,000
miles, excellent condition, heavy
duty bumper, radio, mirrors.
Offers. 384-7460.
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
1976
Dodge Tradesman
Vans,
Sportman Wagons,
Pick-Up Trucks
Cob and Chassis datsun p.u., m motor
Fun Craft Busy-Vans H,p. bump*-,
QUALITY USED
TRUCKS
76 DODGE %-Ton Pick-up
75 JEEP CJ5
75 DODGE Van
74 DODGE Si-Ton Pick-up
74 FORD 5i-Ton Pick-up
74 FORD 9i-Ton Pick-up
with Dump body
74 DODGE !4-Ton Pick-up
74 FORD ^i-Ton Pick-up
1965 MERCURY ECONOLINF
van, samI-camparltao, mechani¬
cally sound, sell or trade for mo¬
torcycle. Phone after 4, 313-4139.
MUST SELL: 1974 1-TON
Chevrolet crew cab camper spe¬
cial. Auxiliary gas tank. Canopy.
1700 miles. 3844435.
MUST SELL CUSTOMIZED '71
Di^e Van. $ 48000 or bast offer.
Trades considered. 454-1843 after 4
REBUILT '41 DODGE, %-TON,
flat deck, one owner, very good
shape throughout, offers. Phone
after 5 P.m. $93-4534.
1974 FORD ^-TON CAMPER SPE-
del, automatic, power steering,
power brakes, mileage 20,000.
$4,295. 478-4448.
NEW GAS TANK (AUXILIARY 8
gals.], all fittings for hookup In-
duded — flBar^as reinforced
used few months In 1976 Ford. Will
sell for $65. Ph.: 382-2218 (mornings
or evenings).
RADIATOR REKAIRS, kAST TOP
quality rapairt at Maurice's Auto
Body, 427 Beta St., phont 386-3381
Located behind the Burnside Pay
and Sava Gas Station.
VOLVO FREAKS, BE THE
proud owner .of otdast Volvo In
Canada. A '57 444 Sedan. Needs
work. Also '61 544 for parts.
598-7763, ask for Howard.
TWO T-A RADIALS, GR 68X14
mounted on slotfad Indy maos.
Fits Cougar or Mustang. 4 Kay-
stone nrwgs, 14x6, tits same at
above. 477-4768.
EDELBROCK X-C8 CROSS-RAM
for small block Chevy, complete
w4th 3-6X C.F.M. certers end link-
ege, 386-2157, Bob.
VICTORIA 4-WHEEL DRIVE
FREE WHEELING HUBS for any
make of 4-whMl drive. D-13ni
597 Hillside at Rock Bay 38^11
BEAST 35) WINDSOR, 9,X0
milts on new motor, ell chromed.
Must sdl, $3,5X or best offer.
3844692.
1964 FORD PICKUP, NO MOTOR,
Open for offers. B. Madsen Motors
Ltd., 2691 sooke Road, 478-5011.
DL005698.
64 MERC MONTCLAIR
Marauder, power windows, new
shoes and drums, trans for 390 all
accessories 595-2409.
67 CAMARO DRIVE TRAIN, 10
bolt reer end. Stock 4 speed treny.
AAotor parts. Brand new LT1 cam
and lifters. 477-3139.
390 WITH 4 BARREL. NEW
points, plugs water pump every¬
thing Included, UX. Excellent con¬
dition. 595-2409.
340 HEADS, DOUBLE SPRINGS,
lust surfseexi, low rmteeQe. Alto
bare 273 heads, valve gear,
382-0556.
Opening Soon
SHERWOOD
Mobile
ond
Modular
Home
Pork 1
Oitiers are now being taken'
on new homes in Sherwood
Mobile and Modular Home!
Park.^
This new park features: |
Quiet country etmosiihere, j
200 feet river frontage, boat-1
ing, sMimming, fishing, j
Over 1 acre unspoiled lei-j
sure area. Close to schools.
Shopping, ice arena.
Spaces are allocated cm a
first come first served
basis.
V7RECKING A '47 OLDS, '44 FAL-
con, a 1944 Chav, also 400 cubic
Inch Buick motor. 383^25. attar 4
or lall day Sunday.
4—15X8. 4-80LT CHEV TRUCK
wheels. $30 tach. Victoria 4-whtel
driva. 3844511, 997 Hllltlda at
Rock Bay. D-13531.
'44 FORD HARDTOP PARTS AND
good 353 motor, $75 3-4pa«d t.-rans-
mission and shifter, iX radio,
$ 10 .; 382-0344.
72 FORD Va TON, LOW MILE-
age, S25X or best offer. Trades
considered. 384-0134.
'68 FORD FIX WITH CAMPER,
excellent condition, low mileage.
X4-3468.
'56 MERCURY FOR PARTS, RE-
building your Ford or AAarc, have I
got a part for youl Calf now
6524704.
1970 DODGE *4 TON PICKUP. V8,
automatic. Power staaring, power
brakes, sure grip dlfferantlal.
Radio, back bumper, dual tanks.
$27X. 458-8823.
'n FRD ^ XLT, c-w '73 JW
VANGUARD Camper $7495
'72 FORD 34 $3495.X
S. J. PEDEN LTD.. D-13432
2855 Qu esnal St ._
1971 KENWORTH WITH 335 CUM-
mtm 5 and 4 44 doubles, one year
old NahenI, complete with sth
wheel. Can be seen at Pacific 44
on Bay St._
DATSUN »/i-TON. NEW TRANS-
mission, clutch. Excellent all
round. Must be seen. $1300 or
offers. 386-9405. 42 Government
Street.
ARTS CAR SALES
310 BAY 38.V8302
TRUCK and VANS at LOWEST
PRICES AN YWHERE. D-X286A
'69 FORD TON. '70 CAVEMAN
Camper IIS excellent condition,
weekdaya after S, Saturday, ^ndav
after 12. 725 Porter Rd., Esqui-
melt. __
SCHOOtTBiTSES, 6749. 34 PASS.,
Bluebird, Dodge. V-8, 318 I*"? 2
speed. Munro AAotors Dll IX.
748-8760, 744-7434._
'67 INTERNATIONAL PANEL
truck, % ton, 4 speed, X4 V-8, $4X
NO TTOWN PAY^fENT
100% BANK FINANCE
O.A.C.
1972 FORD ECONOLINE, 4 CYL-
Inder, standard, customized interl
or, S34X. Phone X2-8545.
MUST SELL: •’ CAMPERETTE
In excellent condition. First rea-
soi>ablt offar takas. 383-8334.
1962 GMC .DUAL-WHEEL TRUCk!
Closed van type, vidth refrigeration,
385-3441.
SEE THE
TRUCK
SPECIALISTS
AT
ENSIGN
DODGE TRUCK
CENTRE
QUADRA
at
CALEDONIA
386-2411
Ask for
Truck Sales
Dealer Licence
Number D-495B
1046 CHEVROLET WINDOW VAN,
good condition, $850 or best offer.
479-3881.
1974 CHEV. a^-TON, EXCELLENT
condition, low mileage, many
extras. 5954951 after 5 p.m.
DATSUN PICKUP. CANOPY,
heavy duty bumper, soare wheels
and carrier, $1B95._442-S339.
1949 FORD W-TON, 4 CYLINDER,
motor needs work, oood otherwise.
$9X or bast offer. 452-2140.
'75 GMC VAN. 125-INCH WHEEL
base, 350 automatic, power steer-
Ing, power brakes, heavy outy
shocks and springs, rear windows
vent. Sanyo cassette deck, dual
speakers, removable bench seat
and sleeping platform. Ilka r.aw,
14,0X miles, $5795. 595-4438.
'74 CHEROKEF CHIEF JEEP
Quadra-trac, 78X miles, full war-
ranty. every conveiveble option.
Including winch, extra gas tank
and multiplex stereo. $XX. Call
Glen, 592-2431 or 598-7689 after 5.
479-4567 after 6 p.m.
'71 VW WESTPHALIA
Owner transferred and must sell.
Factory camperized model with
poptop, sink. Icebox, and many
'61 FORD Vi-TON 4X4, 2234 CYL-
Inder; 8' step-side box; W^n
hubs; tested, runs well. Asking
1970 GMC WtON short, BOX
pickue, rebuilt motor and trens.,
new brakes and extras. 656-4407 or
4774543.
for this beautiful cam^. <S6-^5.
'62 VOLKSWAGEN BUG. RE-
built motor, haaders, cam, 2 bar¬
rel Holley carburetor, etc. Good
condition. $425. 452-1X1.
1973 FORD 3^-TON, V4. 4-SPEEO.
air shocks, best cash offer. PiMSe
phone Jim at 478-1791 or 478-9125
after 6:X P.m.
1945 FORD VAN .EXCELLENT
condition, seml-camperized. many
extras. Owner moving. 383-4382,
384-0309.
1964 DODGE VAN. VERY GOOD
mechanicatly, partially completed
interior. $24X. Open to offers.
Need to sell, 384-1757 or 384-3433.
SIERRA CLASSIC 1975 GMC
^4-ton camper special, deluxe
model, fully equipped, 7,OX miles,
best offer. 2741 Victor.
40 MERC '/a TON, BRAND NEW
flat deck end box. year old motor,
good work truck. Must sell. 1950 or
best offer. 993-4273.
'73-CJ5, 304 v-8, SOFT TOP.
rear seat, carpet, bush-bar, 11X
tires, radio, real clean, A-) condi¬
tion. Asking 843X. 6544909.
LEN BARKLEY
INTERNATIONAL LTD.
New and Used Trucks
517 Herald Street 388-5508
1947 G.M.C. HALF TON 4 CYL.
FOUR speed, w-c Mirrors, heavy
duty bumper $975. B end B CAR
SALES 3233 Douglas St., 0-X794A.
duty. Excellent condition. Safely
checked In 76. $2,OX. 643-5361. Be¬
tween 84 p.m.
1975 CHEV. Ai-TON. P.S,. P.B..
radio, 350 V8, 4-speed, $3,195.
478-S104.
USED TRUCKS
Half-ton pickups to tandems
GEORGE ENG TRUCK SALES
3810A Rock Bay Ave. 385-3054
'74 VOLKSWAGON WINDOW'VAN
with AM-FM radio, radial tires,
excellent condition, very reason¬
able. 452-1304, 3844290.
1974 DODGE CLUB CAB ••'i-TON
Ing, power brakes. %6.M. 479-5658.
1966 FORD 250. 352 V4, 4-SPEED
posltractlon, good condition. $I0X.
443-3949.
1973 COLKSWAGEN VAN, 'PAR-
tiaiiy camperized, 2I,0X miles, ex¬
cellent condition. $4,2X or nearest
offer. 477-5344.
1969 FORD 34 TON, CAMPER
Special, automatic, power steering,
power brakes, many extras. $31X
or best offer. 384-4446.
1945 FORD TANDEM, CAB AND
Chaste, V4 Cummings diesel, 5
and 4. $2.5X or trade. 384-9424.
'75 JEEP CJ5 RENEGADE, EX-
ceilent shaoe, low mileage. $45X
or offers. 592-1173.
1967 GMC HANOIVAN. ONE
owner, needs some cosmetic work.
Offers around $9X. 1)2-743-2X5.
'/a TON PICKUP TRUCK tAN-
opy, used one week. 382-5154. Ask
for Jerry.
1967 CHEV ONE TON, V8, 4
Speed standard, excellent shape,
utility box. 477-9224. 4774949.
'70 FORD A4.TON, CAMPER SPE-
clel, automatic, tested, $2450.
3834840.
FORD CAMPERVAN, 1944, NEW
engine, brakes, Invested $20X
want $1,0X. 595-5505.
'49 FORD DUMP, 225 CAT OIB-
sel, 12 yd. Knight aluminum box,
$59X. 743-2184.
1974 DATSUN SPORTS TRUCK. 4
ply tires, heavy duty bumper, can¬
opy, 22J)X miles. Offers. 654-4891.
1973 FORD ’/Y-TON. V4, AUTO-
matic, excellent shape. Asking
$30X. 478-1476 after 5.
1945 MERCURY 6X 13t.^ FT. VAN,
good tires. $1250. E. P. Moyer
R.R. 1 Chemainus. 244-3991.
'65 GMC W-TON PICKUP, ME-
chanically excellent. $A10 or near¬
est offer. 478-6326 between 5-6:X.
45 DODGE FARGO, EXCELLENT
Lundlllon, Asking $1,200. LSn be
seen at 1117 Csiedonla.
1975 G.M.C, VVTON 350, IMAAACU-
lale. low mileage. $S0X. n3-3536.
TOYOTA LAND CRUISER, Ex¬
ceptionally well maintained,
extras. $4,7X. 652-1SS9.
61 FORD ECONOLINE VAN. Cus¬
tomized. tested. 382-3228.
STUDENT MUST SELL '44 ECON-
oline with stareo, carpeting, rebuilt
engine. 456-5458.
67 GMC 4x4 AND CAMPER. $2,1X
6544866.
1966 DODGE FARGO Vj-TON. EX-! ^
ceilent condlilion. $1100. 656-5337. ] 382-1617.
1974 FORD Vr-TON CUSTOM'73 VW WESTPHALIA, $5,7X.
471-1185 479-2U7. after 5.
1947 AUSTIN 11W. GOOD CONDI
tion. radio, new retreads but auto¬
matic trasmission needs work,
best offer. Phone 458-5475.
CUSTOMIZING WITH SIDE
mouldings, pin stripes, wheel
disks, beautv rings. GT stripes,
etc, etc. Karl's Auto Acceasorlas,
388-4275, pager 459 or 384-23X.
'62 CORVAIR VAN, SEMI CAM-
perized, excellent condition, $890
or offers. 47B-47X.
TOYOTA HILUX '72. 6000 EN-
gine, and tires, 818X, or offer.
384-2374.
GOOD, CLEAN 1948 DODGE
V^-ton, 58,OX miles. $15X or offers.
479-3273.
1965 INTERNATIONAL
excellent shape. 452-292.
MICHELIN
"X”
Radiol Tires
All Sizes Available
AT
D & D TIRE
1620 Blanshard
382-7283
_ 8XX14.5 STUDDED SNOW
tires, mounted on 8-hole rims, will
fit Dodge, Ford. GMC trucks,
price, SIX, phone 385-1729 after 4
p.m.
leo PARTS, ACCESSORIES
TOYOTA LAND CRUISER EN-
gIne excellent condition, 40,0X
miles, $175 or offers. 478-47X.
AUTO BODY WORK
AND PAINTING
SELL IT
THROUGH
CLASSIFIED
DIAL 386-2121
166 CABS AND TRUCKS
WANTED
56 VW SHELL, UNDER CAR.
'laga, and body parts, movable.
1500 Cc unassembled. 658-8372.
WRECKING 1968 FORD GALAX-
ie 5X fastback, glass, rebuilt 289,
heads and otw parrt._479-9212.
TWO 8ENCH~sVATSrEACH'C0M-
pieta with 3 seat belts, Ford
van. 4S6-8235.
TRIUMPH SPITFIRE, NO RUN-
ning gear, $75. Motor, $35. Offers.
386-4696.*
WANTED
TO BUY
TOP QUALITY CARS
DePape Motars Ltd.
760 Jcrfinson .'T84*S035
JEEP PARTS 1941-1975 WH1TCO
tops $2X, reversing winches, SSX.
477-1784.
1959-41 VAUXHALL PARTS, 1965
Ford 340 and 3-spaed automatic.
Phone 477-1590.
WANTED: 327 OR 350 ALSO TUR-
bohydro 4X. 478-3847.
WANTED: 4 CHRYSLER RALLY
iporte wheels. 362-0447 after 5 p.m.
STARTING OUT. WANTED TO
buy: AAechanlc's tools. 478-9470.
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR GOOD CLEAN
USED CARS
Peter Pollen
Ford Ltd.
lOGO YATES 384.U-M
and MOTOR HOMES
S. J. PEDEN
LTD.
Eobinhootii
SALES AND SERVICE
2714 SOOKE RD.
478-9912. 478-9517
D.L. (I0422A
DON'T MISS
THIS!
ALL REMAINING 76
ItfOTS
MUST re CLEARED
77's ARE ON
THE WAY
NO REASONABLE
OFFERS REFUSED
ON
TENT TRAILERS
MOTORHOMES
TRAVEL TRAILERS
Sth WHEELS
Come out this Sunday!
656-5604
Pat Bay Hwy., Sidney
D.L. 15802
TILLICUM J-TIRNTTURE
2412 SOOKE RD.
Now makes camper, trailer and
boat cushions. Any size or shape.
Full salactlon of materials avail¬
able. Fraa astlmatas. 4784522.
13 FT. HOLIDAY TRAILER
In excellent condition. Cleen and
ready to go. Propane stove, Icebox
fridge, electric brakes, equsllzer,
kitchen. Levelling lacks. Asking
$1,375.x. Call 384-^1 after 5.
EXCHANGE «
X' K and C Cruiser In-OB, marine
head, sleeper seats, power trim.
Full canvas In axcetlsnt shape.
Value $7X0. Trade as part pay¬
ment on smsilar motor home ap-
prox. 19-M'. Phone 598-1^.
1 9 75 OKANAGAN CAMPER,
3-way fridge, propane stove, and
lacks. $2,200 or naaraet offer. Will
also accept factory built canopy
for Toyota Long Box as part pay¬
ment. W-3492.
14W' VANGUARD TRAILER,
self-contained, vary good condiiton.
$18X. Will consider hardtop tent
trailer as partial trade. 3II-S391,
3074 Earl Grey.
9Va' CAVEMAN, FRIDGE, FUR-
nace, stove, oven, other extra fea¬
tures. Good condition. $1SX. Also
6V'a' Camper for short box '/i-ton.
4031 Hodgson Place.
1975 TRAVEL TRAILER 27'
almost new, slaw up to 8 , full
length awning. TV antenna, fur-
USED AND NEW 19' FLEURY
motor homes, frailars 23* and 35'.
Jackson's, 974 Goldstraam.
OL 00044A.
Caastline's
ZUPER
ZALE
"76
TRAILERS
PROWLERS
$500 OFF
TRAVELAIRES
$300 OFF
TRILLTUMS
$200 OFF
TRAVELMATES
$300 OFF
KUSTOM KOACH
$500 OFF
"MOTORHOMES"
BY JAMBOREE
$750 OFF
HERE NOW
Travelaire
23'MINI
MOTORHOME
The talk of Victoria. The
Travelaire Mini-Motorhome
must be seen, there are no
words that can really de¬
scribe its beauty, its quality,
or its charm ~ Just one left
in stock. But we will take
your order for the Sept. run.
COASTLINE
10 Years in Victario
Veteran RV'ers
and Roakies - Enjay
Life More
478-0933
1621 Island Hwy.
(Across from Colwood's
Farmers Market)
Weekdays 10 'til 9 p.m.
Open Sunday
1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Dealer Uc. No. D-13719
VANGUARD
CLEAROUT
PRICES
On All Remaining
'76 Stock
i,;t vANouAflo i«'i" Mim.
Horns. This roomy unit has 6.6
cu. ft. fridgt, forcad air fur-
naca, larga ovan, showar, flush
toliat, ate.
Rag. $14,530.X
SAVE $ 1.265.0
AND PARKS
OKANAGAN
CAMPERS and TRAILERS
Clearance Prices
EXAAAPLE:
17 ft. trallar, aiaapa 6 with
fridge, furnace, rangahood. tol¬
iat and twin tanks.
REGULAR $4,785
NOW ONLY $4,185
(All wiring Indudtd)
YOU SAVE 8 4X
CLEAN TRADES
'4 5 CAVEMAN, jacks, pvtn,
fridga, range hood $1,395
'48 SECURITY, jack a, ovan,
tridga, furnaca $1,295
PARTS SPECIALS
Hydraulic Jacks, set
$184.95
iRstsIlatiM
$
25.x
Sani-Potti Toilets
8
99.95
Car Fender Mirror
for trailers, pr.
8
14.95
20 -lb. propane bottles
t
21.50
Trailer Stack Jacks
$
4.75
2S ft. water hoses
$
349
Now Ooan Thurs., Frl. 'til 9 p.m.
PHONE 3844213 anytima
LOGAN'S RV SERVICE CENTRE
450 Burnside Rd. Near Douglas
D—I34SB
HOME MADE HARD TOP TENT
traiar, fridgt, curtains, mattrassas,
cable, ample cupboard space, new
tiraa $450. 4764451.
45 VW CAMPER. REBUILT.
Professionally camparliad. Runs
well. Offers on $12X. 477-5510,
382-4069.
1968 AIRSTREAM TRAILER, 31
ft. bath, twin bads. Immaculate.
$79X. Phpna Duncan 112-7444191.
0ISO4A
FOR RENT
74 Winnebago Mini X', sleeps 4,
air condillontd. I2X. par weak.
479-1047.
1973 — 25' PROWLER, FULLY
self-contained. Asking $45X. or
bast offar. 479^2719.
KUSTOM KOACH, 27V4'. GOOD
condition. $58X. 13M Merritt
Street. 479-9S39.
1972 VW WESTPHALIA CAMPER,
3A0X miles, wait maintained,
$4,850. 477-5834.
14' ALUMINUM TRAVEL TRAIL-
ar, sink, stove, ate., vary good
condition. $7M. 471-9704.
BOAT LOADERS, CUSTOM
made for campers, mini-hon
478-3794, 478-27S4.
FOR RENT: 14' HOLtDAIRE
trallar. Fully equipped. By weak
or month. 598-8518.
SNO-BIRD RECREATIONS LTD.
142) Island Hwy. 478-3424
Campers—Trallars^Van Inserts
1974 TOYOTA TRUCK AND
camper, good condition with
I extras , $5X)X . 384-4638._
|l>74 WINNEBAGO INDIAN
I motor home, 14,5X miles, as new,
598-7614.
CASH
We will buy your car for cash.
G.C.M. Motors Ltd:, 780 Gold'
stream Ava., 478 3242. D-7i97.
1955-57 CHEV. Va TON PICK-UP
truck, body and running gear must
be In good corKimon. Phone
384-4973.
Wa Buy Cara—Instant Cash
PLIMLEY
1010 Yates Street 312-9121
Good Used cars wanted for cash
168 CAMPERS, TRAH^ERS
and MOTOR HOMES
VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER,
haw angina, 2 new tiras, baautiful-
f' maintalnad, asking $3400.'
I 595-4615.
975 LIONEL IX TENT TRAIL-
r, as new, 3 burners, double gas
ank and accessories. $2,2X or
bast offer. 477-9X6.
FOR RENT. 25' MOTOR HOME,
omplataly'~ equipped, off season
rates. 479-4612.
14' SCAMPER TRAILER, GOOD
condiiton, S16X or will trade for
boat. 478-0270.
CAMPER FOR IMPORT TRUCK,
sleeps 4. Offers. 3834454 days.
1 972 CAMPERIZED
wagon, $34M. 112-743-2X5.
HARDTOP TENT TRAILER,
sleeps 4, $550. 384-518).
1971 FORD 4X4, 8' CAMPER,
many extres. 382-7522, 477-0339.
BOB'S
MOBILE HOMES LTD.
25 Crease 386*3623
DL00414A
TRAVEL TRAILERS
STH WHEELS
MINIHOMES
PARTS—PROPANE
SERVICE
386-3623
DOGWOOD
TRAILER SALES LTD.
1964 X' STREAMLINE SlaaPt 6
Propane and Electric hot water
864X.X
NEW 21' RanDell Fifth-Wheel
$46X.X
NEW IIMi' RanDell Trailer $53X.X
'__ 26X Davllle Road
DL13587 478-6841
TRAV-LrMATE
CAMPERS
For Import Trucks
HORWOOD MAZDA
Exclusive Dealers
385-1451
17' TRAVELAIRE TRAILER,
sitaos 6, ancloaad toilet, wash¬
basin, tridga, furnaca, range, oven,
wall-to-wall rugs, spare tira, equal-
izar hitch, ate., vary low mileage.
Excellent conditon. $3250. 384-8gX.
TRUCK AND CAMPER FOR
sale. '63 GMC 3^ truck, 10'
camper, fridge, oven, furnace,
electric water pump end 3.wev
light, 2 propane bottles and jacks,
SIBX or bast offer. 478-1231.
74 FORD ai-TON CAMPER SPE-
ciat, XLT automatic, 16,OX miles,
most options. 1975 Cascade 9*
camper, fridge, furnace, jacks.
OHers to $87X. 592-3042.
11 FT. VANGUARD CAMPER. AS
new, 3-way fridga, stove, furnaca,
hot water tank, flush toilet, show¬
er, carpet, hydraulic jacks. Price
$4,750. 245-3829 Ladysmith.
71 VW WESTPHALIA CAMPER,
37,0X miles, certified maintenance
record. Premium condition
throughout. $4.9X. 477.74X, eve¬
nings. ,
1971 VANGUARD 9V^' 'CAMPER,
3-wsy fridga, furnace, stove, van¬
ity end chemical toilet, lacks and
2 tanks. Good clean condition.
$1995. 479-4729.
1975 17' TRAVELAIRE -SELF-
contanad, 3:way fridga. ovan,
heater, slaaps 4, complete with
hit h, tanks and car mlrrori, like
new: 458-8184.
OASIS, ALL PROPANEt 3
way tights, toilet, canopy, many
extras, must be sold. 813X.
384-2718.
IT’/Y TEEPEE TRAILER, ELEC-
trie fridge, electric heat, flush toi¬
let end ate. 4544527.
MOTOR HOME FOR RENT.
' Availabla Aug. 22 on. 384-70X.
l^obinlioob
SALES AND SERVICE
USED HOMES
L 3040 — 14x40 Expando home, 1
bedroom, lovely condition through¬
out, on bus route, Colwood area.
Pad rant 860. $8,IX.
L 3147 — 12x61, 2 bedroom, utility
room, reverse Isle. Sooke area.
$23,OX obo.
L 3271 — 24x40, 3 bedroom, near
new. on private lot. Langford.
S24,5X.
L 3278 — 12x68, 2 bedroom. 8x26
NOW ONLY .13.!6S.»
- 2140 — 12x56, 2 or 3 bedroom
Sooke area, (^ulat waterfront park,
$t04K>0.
Many mora ntw and used homes
to choose from.
FRANCHISE DEALER FOR
HOMCO AND MANCO
2714 Sooke Rd. 476-9912, 478-9517
OL 00422A
PARTS AND
ACCESSORIES .
WE SELL AND INSTALL
Van Taps
PROFILED ALUMINUM
Rentals
BOOK NOW!
S. J. PEDEN
LTD.
2855 Quesnel St.
D-13432
386-3464
DOMINION
MOTORS
HOME OF
CHINOOK
AAOTORHOMES
USED
STH
73-28Vi Ft. Scamper
Fully seH-contelned, plus «lr con¬
ditioner with heat strip, in like
new condition.
Was $6250 NOW $7995
75-301/2 Ft. Terry
Fully self-contained, air condl'
tionar, with strip.
Was 89795 NOW $9SX
Wa Spaclallze In
I.C.B.lf. Autoplan
Campers and Trailers
17X BLANSHARD ST.
(Across from Hudson's Bay park¬
ing lot) Victoria, B.C., 385-X12
Dealer Licence Number D-5536
VICTORIA
RV CENTRE
AND
DUNCAN
BOATLAND
Qt ane locatian
GRAND
OPENING
SALE
Aug. M
1080 COLDSTREAM AVE.
478-8377
FENNELL'S
TRAILER SUPPLIES LTD.
Parts — Propane — Repairs
CANOPIES
PARKLANE tent trailers
2 styles of VAN TOPS
Custom Building and
Van Cemveraions
6459 Patricia Bay Hwy.
652>3941
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
MUST SELL: OLDER TRAILER
In Immaculate condition with
stove, fan. ovan, 2-way fridga, toi¬
let with Shower, 2 propene tanks,
jacks, equipped with electric
brakes, sleeps 6. Open to offers.
385-SIX, 383-^.
1971, 19' SCAMPER, SLEEPS 6,
bathroom has toilet sink and show¬
er. fridge 3 way, lighting 3 way, 3
burner stove and oven, axcellant
condition. Must be seen. Asking
$43X. 456-4925.
WANTED TO RENT, BY SEP-
tembar 1. Mini motorhome or
camper. 477-8424.
26' TRAILER. SELF^ONTAINEO.
Seperata bedrooms. Furnaca.
$39X, 478-7167.
1976 r TRUCK CAMPER. FUR-
naca, stove, ice box. Fits V$-ton.
$2,2X. 642-5361, between 8-9 p.m.
CANOPY FOR SALE. INSULAT-
ed panels, light vents, windows
36“ high, offers 477-53X.
TENT TRAILER, SLEEPS 4.
propane stove, tank, and light.
Dishes, blankets, ate. Asking $250
or bCCT offer. 5954340.
OTTO PROSPECTOR T E
trailer, hard top, slaapt 6, pro¬
pane stove, good oondltlon, 81'—
642-3969.
1975 31' TERRY STH WHEEL
with hitch, fully furnish^, TV end
antenna, excellent condition.
478-6X7.
72 OKANAGAN CAMPER FOR
import truck, high [ackers, asking
$1,650 or offers. ^4509.
10' OLDER CAMPER, NICE CON-
dlton, $1,0X firm. 3572 Cedar Hill
Road.
1976 21' OUTCHCRAFT TRAILER,
fully salf-containad, 3 month old,
3,1X miles, asking i6,3X. 656-1706.
CAMPERETTE FOR IMPORT
truck. New condition. Phone
479-2153.
JUST
A HOP
Skip and lump to Regal Atobiia
Homes, Nanaimo, will Insure you
of complatt assistance In purchas¬
ing that ntw homa.
Our program consist! of
—C.S.A. approved homes
—CMHA excellence
—zix building code
—IX per cent financing (O.A.C.)
—Govtrnment grants appllcabla
-^11 homes are fully furnished
Including drapes and major ep-
pilancas
Single widas from
$14,900
Delivery and set-uo included
Double wides from
$1/,900
Delivery and set-up Included
REGAL MOBILE HOMES
Nanaimo, across from Long Lake,
next to Nanaimo Chrysler
Open 9 to 9, Open ^ndeys
Phone 758-7369, call collect
HOMES LTD.
The Homa of Atodem
Manufactured Housing
AvsUeble on a turn-key Basis
2681 SOOKE RD.
478-8303
MEMBER
WESTERN MOBILE HOME
DEALERS' ASSOCIATION
D.L. 00832-A
BENDDC and MANCX)
2435 Trans Can. Hwy.
478-1774, 1>01056A
Mon.-Sat., 9-6 p.m.
"HIDDEN VALLEY." Tht
linast In mobllahoma living. Look
at all the rest first and then come
end see “HIDDEN VALLEY."
View our quality homes and beau¬
tiful sites. You'D choose a home In
'•HIDDEN VALLEY" because you
gel more for your money than
anywhere else. Exclusive sales
egents—
ADMIRAL HOMES LTD.
25X Florence Lake Rd. 47S6434
(MCD-41343A)
FOR SALE BY OWNER, BEAUTI-
ful 1975 24x52, Chancellor 3-bed-
room manufactured homa in Hid¬
den Valley on high lot. 2
bathrooms with spacious kitchen,
living room and dining room. Fur¬
nished. All appliances. 828,5X.
476-0006.
MUST SELL! MOVING, COM-
tortabla compact 2-bedroom mobile
home In Mill Bay Park. Skirled,
landscaped, veranda, shad. Call
collect, 743-5942 afta 4 p.m. and
weekends.
FOR SALE 1973 XX12 2 BED-
room Neonax Expendo, appliances,
fully skirted, sundeck carport at¬
tached, desirable location, ask¬
ing $lf5X^Ce!l_478-3171.__
IIX ‘ SQ^ FT. AAARLETTE IN
adult park for sale. All electric.
Large china cabinet washer,
4fryar, carpets, curtains, garage
and shad. Must be seen to be ap¬
preciated. Phone 478-6443.
AND PABKS
B^obinboob
SALES AND SERVICE
-4fll Another rent diy approach¬
ing?
It needn't continue any lensar
—Wa want you to have the bast
for your family
■Wa can assist you In obtaining
your own homa
—wa will Show you how lltti# It
cen cost
—The Initial Invaetmanf required.
Your time
^Drop in or phone ut and diKusa
your piarticular needs
—You could be investing your
present wasted rent In your own
home this month. We know you
will agree It's worth a call
—Our coffee pot Is always on
2714 Sooke Rd. 478-9912, 4784517
D.L. X422A
Now Available
Horn® Selection for
GEORGE ESTATES
"A Modem Adult
Development"
Located in
Esquimalt
For Information
Appointment
CaU
478-8305
HAPPY V ATJ.Ti Y homes
NEW
12x68 MODUUNE
Fully furnished on spaclouf
lots, at
6947 GRANT ROAD,
SOOKE
ONLY $19,950 Easy bank
terms.
Phone 652-2776
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Late 1974 Monarch Double Wide
Mobile Home 11,052 sq. ft., cared
for but never occupied. Furnished,
custom decorated with wall-wall
carpal throughout. 3 Bedrooms, 2
Full Bathrooms, built-in Buffet In
dining rm. Washer, Dryer, Fridge
and Stove all Included. Sundtek
8x24 ft., located on a well land¬
scaped lot, in a small exclusive
Adult Park overlooking Cewichan
Bay. Asking $2B,9X. Pltasa call
452-3036.
COLDSTREAM
MOBILE HOMES LTD.
PARAMOUNT PREMIER
JWONARCH AND PARKWOQD
Modern park space avaliablt
with all purchases
2994 Jactclln
L,«nc. NO.
_OPEN TO 5:30
DRIVE NORTH TO GORDENS,
Ladysmith and view our large se¬
lection of new 1974 Mobile ffomts.
Fully furnished, delivered and set
up, singles priced from $16.BX.
Gordens Mobile Sales Ltd., 3mliee
south of Ladysmith on Island
Highway, phone 245-3946. OL
DREAM HOME, BEAUTIFUL
Brentwood Bay location. Ocean
view with spacious lot. 1975 24x4r
fully furnished with workshop, util¬
ity room, sundeck, porch. $10.0X
of extras. Sacrifice ^,9X. Phone
478-9122. _ _
12X46 '71 SQUIRE, 2 BEDROOMS]
covered carport, garden shed,
skirted, landscaped, fridga, stove,
drapes included. Located in Lang-
fWd. $ 11,9X. 476-5607. _
ADULTS; MANY SINGLE AND
double wtdes In various locations,
adults only. 474-12X. Family Mo¬
bile Homes DL. 00X9 — 24 hours.
bo U B LE WIDE FULLY F U R-
nlshed, excellent condition, 474-1288
Family Mobile Homes DL. 00809 — ,
24 hourS;_
DOUBLE 12' AND 8' WIDE
bile homes In quiet edulT park,
near bus, stores. Jackson's, 974
Go ldstraam. DL00044A. ■ _
12X68 NEONEX, NEW, 3 BED*
rooms, on bus route, 1 block from
schwl, Sie,9X. Try $1^ down,
bank financing. O.A.C. 478-9122.
1974 DOUBLE WIDE 3 BED^
rooms, 2 bathrooms, separata utiii-
ty room, larga sundKk in Hidden
Valiev Perk. 478-6747.
NEWSTEAD HOAAES LTD^
12x48 MONARCH 2-BR.
ax Qu adra _384-8871
2-Bedroom Mobile Home
478*6841
KUSTOM KOACH, 27',^', GOOD
condition. $58X, 1360 Merritt
Straat. 479-9539.
NEWSTEAD HOMES LTD.
24X52 AMDULINE Premium 3 BR
32X Quadra 3844871
2 BEDROOM AAOBILE HOME IN
Sooke, moving must tell $5,SX.
442-3574, 476-t4».
185 CONVALESCENT AND
REST HOMES
SUNNY. SEMI-PRIVATE ROOMS
available in small resthome. Good
meals. 595-1513.
12X61 S-BEDROOM NEONEX Es¬
tate, IVi years old, set up in Cedar
Creek, Mill Bay. Porch, fenced,
utility shed, landscaped and skirt¬
ed. I.4aving province, must sail.
743-X74.
DOUBLE WIDE DELUXE GLEN-
<tola 3 bedroom, m baths, larga
living room and dining room with
built in china cabinet. Excellent
condition. Must sell. $19,SX or
offers. 384-2431, 8:30-4:»._
10'X46' mobile' home’ LOCAfED
at No. 10 Pedder Bay Trallar
Park. Can remain on property
with rant of $S4 par month, temi-
furnlshad, 86,SX or bast offer.
478-3452 or 478-2433.
IM ROOM AND BOARD
O^K BAy“GUeTThouse
1052 Newport Avenue. Located
amid beautiful garden, near bus
stop, golf course, marina and post
oftica. Attractive suite consisting
of larqa sitting room, bedroom and
private bathroom. 598-3812 or
598-4330, 10 a.m. to 6:X P.m.
EIJECUTIVE OR PROFESSIONAL,
deluxe accommodation for gentile
non-smoker. 658-5B7t.
191 ROOM ANiTbOAR^
WANTED
ELDERLY LADY NEEDS OWN
room with board in private home.
Kindly environment. VIctorle area.
Close to transportation. 656-4954
after 4 p.m.
10 MINS. FROM VICTORIA AT A
bus stop. 1975 moblla home, 12x52.
with stove, fridgt, washer, dryer,
dishwasher. Children welcome. Fi¬
nancing O.A.C. 478-9122.
12X66 3-BEDROOM, FURNISHED,
major appliances Included. Imge
patio, doubia parking with utility
shed, set up In perk. 819,800.
478-6204 after 4.
FOR SALE 12X68 MOBILE HOME
in Sooke. Skirted. 8x14 addition,
with large sundeck. Major appli¬
ances included. 442-3448, between
10 a.m. — 9 p.m.
12x48~NEONEX ESTATE, 2 BED~-
rooms, dan, furnished, skirted,
small park. In Sooke. Offers on
$19.5X. 442-SS39 or 442-3213, ask
for Dele.
IBS
ROOMS TO KENT
COMFORTABLE LIVING, NO
hassles. $30 week. Everything In¬
cluded. Share cooking facinties.
Preferably students or working
men. Area of Cook-Biy. Phone
364-8272.
^ ATTENTION
Two bedrooms avalteMe at $75
month. Kitchen tacintigs.
Bathroom. Apply in parson be¬
tween 10-12 at 1028 invernass on
Frlday^^_
FURNISHED ROOM TO RENT
to mature mala student, private
entrance, fireplace. Share kitchen
and bath. $120. Availabla Immadi-
ately. 315-5486.
ON DELUXE SPACE IN TRIWAY
Mobile Home Park, Mx12 VanOyka
with 4x12 tilt out, 2 bedrooms,
centre kitchen, adults only.
3844791. D-01297A.
NICE ROOM WITH KITCHEN
privileges, available Saptembar
1st. Sultebla for wiping girl or
stu dent. $ 125. 4794782.
OAK BA'y MRDER. bright!
I large, room. Fridge, stove, and
sink. Utilities paid. Private an-
trance. 595-0246 or 595-1771.
2-BEDROOM VERY CLEAN AND
wail kept Ideal starter or retired.
Family Mobile Homes, 474-1283.
DLXI09.
MOBILE HOMES SETUP
IN PARK
Good selection of sizes
and prices
BOB'S /MOBILE HOMES 386-3623
12'X52‘ LEADER, 2 BEDROOMS,
3 room addition, skirled, utlTlfles
shared, etc. Adult park, $22,5X or
offers. 478-6626.
BUYING OR SELLING
FAMILY MOBILE HOMES
D.L. 0 0809A _
SOOKE IMMACULATE 12X52 2
badroomi, French doors, stove,
fridge, verandah. Park rental
$59.50. 811,OX. 642-4139.
10X53 MOBILE HOME, FOR
salt. $10,500. Unfurnished. Phone
478-5812.
BUYING OR SEIXING
FAMILY MOBILE HOMES
D.L. 00009A 474-12K
1,0X SQ. FT. LIVING AREA. AP-
pilancas, rugs, drapes. IS minutes
downtown. Offm's to $19,500. Adult
4714254. 8 a.m. or I p.m.
CLEAN, SPACIOUS, COMFORT-
abla rooms. Share all facilities. $30
a weak. Everything Included.
592-9284.
SLEEPING ROOMS TO RENT.
$45 weekly. Contact assistant man¬
ager, Douglas Hotel. 3834157.
BREAKFAST* LAUNDRY, KITCH-
en privileges. Young working girl.
479-7661.
NEAR MAYFAIR, BASEAhENT
bed-sIttIng room, no cooking,
young girl only. $60. 382-7020.
QUIET AND LARGE ROOM IN
baeutiful Fairfield area. Shared fa*
Cllltlas. 3824535.
194 ROOMS WANTED
FEMALE STUDENT REQUIRES
accomodation with use of piano,
3834931. After 6. 452-5572.
HOUSEKEEPINO
ROOMS TO RENT
UNFURNISHED ROOM FOR
lady. Stove, Fridge, utimiw. $75.
10X Tlllicum. 658-5736.
NEWLY REDECORATED HOUSE-
keeping room for elderly person.
382-4681.
LARGE CLEAN SUITE, NEAR
lubilee, mature lady. 595-3^
44 <Co(oni0t Victoria, B.C.. Sunday, August 22, 1976
SECLUDED WATERFRONT
h me near UVic offtra lovely fur*
nltfred room ano privete bath In
excnanoe for nomloal rent and
light Choree to female third or
fo rih year university etudent.
477*4439.
UNIVERSnr PARK
TERRACE
Tv/o-bedroom coodomlnlum, avail*
ebie September 1; seune, swirl,
covered perkinor i3S5. Contaa
manager. Suite t2, 4774)914._
IN SIDNEY. HOUSEKEEPING
room. S199 month including vtili*
ties. 456*4619 days or 456*4076 eve¬
nings.
COMFORTABLE HOUSEKEEP*
ing room, for quiet gentlemen,
downtown. 365-33S4. 479*1771.
CLEAN, BRIGHT HOUSEKEEP-
Ing room, SIOO. Men only. 2315
Wark Street.
300 APAATMEMT8 TO
BENT UNFURNISHED
URGENT NOTICE
Questloneire:
—'5qes your rent exceed Si 75 per
month?
—Would you refher seve your
rent?
—Would you like to own your own
home?
If you have answered yes to any
one of the above questions turn to
column 169—Mobile Homes. See
Robinhood Sales end Servlet Corp.
ad.
PEMBROKE PLACE
a30 PEMBROKE ST.-Very close
to downtown, modern 2 bedrooms,
S270; 1*bedroom S2tS. 354-7337.
529 ADMIRALS RO. — Children
welcome, l*bedroom, $310.
HARRISOH HOUSE. Fort-Pandore
area, 14I7 Harrison St., l>badroom,
$209. Aug. IS.
McKENZiE AAANOR, 1010 McKan*
zta Ava., fully modern, sauna, bil*
Hard room, 2 bedrooms, 1297;
l-bedroom, $320: Studio $175.
Phone S9V2227
Kilmarnock Holdings Ltd.
IN THE COUNTRY
30 minutes from Victoria, sdt In
perk-like surroundings on the
shores of the Sooke basin, are
seven 4-plexes neatly pieced In
this country setting. All hive well*
to-weit carpet, fireplaces In old
brick, cotored eppllances and elec¬
tric heat with Individual controls
in every room. Laundry tacllltles,
rec. room with own appliances. In¬
side heated storage compartment,
rent from $240 per month, to view
cell 643*5535.
ELDON PLACE
Large, near new apartment, 3225
Eldon Place, off Burnside, near
Woodwards. Spacious bachelor, 1,
2 and 3 bedrooms from $199. In¬
door heated pool, with sun patio,
swirl pool, sauna, games room,
hobby room, elevator, balconies,
cable TV. covered perking avail¬
able, on bus line, 5 minutes to
downtown. Mature adults only, ref-
erences, no children or pets.
:00 APARTMENTS TO
RENT L’NI-TTRMSIIED
BRAND
NEW
899 Craigflower Rd.
ESQUIMALT
Ready for Aug. 1st
Immediate Occupancy
-1- and 2-bedroom units
—NO pets please
OPEN
TO VIEW
WEEKDAYS
Days 9 a m.-4 p.m.
Eves. 7-9 p.m.
All Day Saturday
OR CALL
TOD-IUCKETT
CONSTRUCTION LTD.
384-nOl, 477-5554
SOI APARTMENTS TO
RENT FURNISHED
PENTHOUSE
MANOR HOTEL
so* DUPLEXES TO RENT jJlO HOUSES TO RENT
AVAILABLE ISt'^OF SEP-i UNFURNISHED
temtoer, north east of Woolco, 3'
bedroom, stove and fridge.
356-1790.
BEACON HILL PARK
Lovely
quiet
ESQUIMALT CHOICE AREA. I Near tne sea and park. Wa.i-to-
2930 Washington 355-7515 Cotv, modern 3-badroom side. I Jh Hvlng-dlnlng room, drapes
New ultro modern deluxe bedroom Basement and garage. Children I include^ New frldpe
and_ bachelor apfrtments._ Beau; welcome . 592-0735. _anyt? vard. $4io. a54-4350
* UPPER DUPLEX FOR RENT.’2 -- -
. HEW SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM
home for rent Includes full base¬
ment, fireplace, wail to wail car-
ott throughout located on quiet
street in Lake Hill, close to bus
and shops, $455 to view call
383-0404.
2-BEDROOM SIDE DUPLEX,
$275. WilMo*wail carpet, fridge,
stove. n3-4943.
FINLAYSON-COOK, LARGE 2
bedroom, wail-to-weil, fireplace,
$335 par month. 479-4337.
4 BEDROOM HOUSE. NEAR
Quadra Elementary. Nice living
room with fireplace and w-to-w,
full basement. Drive-in garage.
$400. Appliances '* --
355-7005.
313 HOU8C8 WANTED
TO BENT
2 MALE sfuDENTs' REQUiRE.
2 -bedrcom home with vary reason---
able rant. Both have Income, ref¬
erences available. 479*4276.
WANTED: HOUSE. TEACHER I
couple. Cadboro-Cordova Bay-i
^yal Oak area. Preferably oni
21S HAIXS. HARUIUII'SI.S.I-BS MORTGAGE MANS :j4»
STORES ssod OFFICES
TO RENT j
and INSURANCE
BL8LNCSA
OPPORTUNITIES
URGENT 2 BEDROOMS. SAiWLL
house or mobile. Minimum rent
Possible. 1 child, I pet. Good ten.
an^Jor_Mlld landlord. $9S*$276.
^UNG COUPLE with” SMALL
dog looking for house, preferably
out of town. References available.
tlfuHy furnished. Situated in quiet
location overlooking Gorge water¬
ways, close to bus service. In¬
cludes color TV, telephone, dish¬
washer, laundromat, sauna and
swirl pool. Maid service. No pets.
Rent by day, week or month^_
daily"—UTEKLY
MONTHLY
Adlacent to inner Harbour and .
Parliament Buildings. Fully fur- 3 BEDROOM FRIDGE, STWE,
nishtd one badroom suites, color j »* ' ♦<>
TV, linen, dishes, indoor pool ,' includes utttitles. 479-7634._
Munill, Min HuMn; IrHREE BEDROOM SUITE,'S3J5.
KOxAL SCOT -INN I Langford. Children welcome. Phone
_425_CWEBEC_ST.^PH. 38S-3543_!352-^. _ _ _
CR.MGFLb\VER~\IOTTra iLANGFORD 3 BEDROOM SIDE,'cabHylsion Incited. Handy, ---- --
September TsI. No pets. $260 per month. URGENTLY NEED 3-BEDROOM
ON GORGE WATERWAY '$297.50 .$95*106,^5-0530. j 386-51 49. __ __.home under $300 for mother and
bachelor ^BEDROOM OUFLEXr$!«'" PE^ , RELIABLE COUPLE WILLING _
r..£ •“,"5 •’ *“*‘1*' montn. Available Immadlalely. 1“ carafaka and maintain beacn i
“""J halls, w.arlhoi'sks.
Completely furnished with meld'" ____— -in exchanee for reasonable
service and laundromat on pra-> 3-BEDROOM DUPlA^ IN LANG* rent. Good references. Cell Nanai*
mists. CALL 1 lord. Available Sept^ ..
ROBERTS
INVESTMENfTS
MANAGEMENT UU
IREPLEPPri j *ojwboougw^^88;6^
NEED MONEY NOW?
garaoa SIUDBNT WITH DOG RE-
.Muirad' ... “TMe, Ladysmith lo
requiraa. Ldntivtile araas, call Tom, Mllect ,
_1 Sooke 642-5817.
AVAILA^E SEPTEMBER 1, uprcwTi 'v— B.i-eF.grs -
l-bedroorrT^ by side duplex with I 2-BED-
;full basement and garage. Wa}er,f5?T.^-??.*fT'?5 .99
, I for 3 responsible aduHs. 477-1297.
388-7861
DELUXE ACCOMMODATION
Furnished one bedroom suites,
from Sept. 15 at off season rates,
colored TV, Indoor pool, aeune,
hydro pool, laundry, weekly maid
service. No pets. Oxford Tower
Inn, 133 Gorge Rd. East. Phone
355-4431.
f $395. Phone
3-BEOROOM SIDE. AAMES 8A^
, married couple, $250. 59$-40M.
HOUSES XO RENT ~
l-NFliRMSHEI)
NICELY FURNISHED 1-BED-
room sulle^ close In Rockland
B D BDntBM^i ABir. a,-,., t*'’**' modem blKk, elevator
P. R. ^i^O^ANOJONS LTD. 'and controlled enirence, suit quiet
RENTALS
BACH'S
$146.57 MACAULAY EAST.
945 Esquimalt Rd.
3554351
$200.00 MACAULAV EAST.
945 Esquimau Rd.
.385-4251.
$205.00 E. G. PRIOR.
2622 Prior St.
355- 7949.
$179.11 VILLA WEST
785 Dominion Rd.
3564444
TWO BDRM
$231.20 OAKVIEW MANOR
3430 Quadra St.
356- 6451
$306.00 MACAULAY EAST
jM^s^qulmalt Rd.
UNFURNISHED HSES.
5287.50 3-6DRM HOUSE
$318.00 3*BDRM. HOUSE
762 Fort Street 955*3435
"People Helping People"
;COZY COTTAGES WITH FIRE*
.places, also modern bungalows,
““""I COUNTRY bungalow
■' vte w - royal ' , bachelor : ay.'or.Y.iiy'iMdaV^^nd v.k;,
[Suite, cottage, $150. Also student located on Farm-llke setting.
: wile $90. Includes all utilities.! Avail. Sapt. 1, $290. Deposit re-
4794112. qgiftd.
4060 MAGDEUN
FURNISHED 1-BEOROOM BASE-
ment suite. Lesa for non-smoker.
Phone 3B6-X39. s4jo. Ideal for family, lovely 4
t Renor\n« ctiouttuen adapt ibdrm. and bsmt. dupltx, fireplace,
‘.®?.‘^’\99.^/!J?.N»SHEDAPART* carpeting in DR and LR,
Owner built. Avail. Sept. 1.
ment, 1150 Colville. 384-7392.
lO-i AP.-UlTaMENT
I-XUNITUBE TO RENT
ASCOT HOUSE
New preetige apertment on a quiet
sirtal, 1537 Morrison St.. First
streM below Fort and Oak Bay
iunclion. Avallabla September 1st.
1 bedroom, S3U
Two—2 bedrooms, $320
3 bedroom $355
Older tenants preferred, no chil¬
dren or oets, on view 9-5 dally,
later by appointment. Phone
UMxl ^ Evenings.
1 BKDROOM APTS. ,
AND ONE 2-BEDROOM GORDREAU
AVAILABLE On Gorge Waterfront
Lease required- Mature
adults only. Soit>' no pets.
Please phone 382-4221
VACANCIES
Hundreds of Vecancies Monthly
Western Canada's Larqest Most
Experienced Rental Agencies
^ Member of BBB. Small fee.
1. $100—Bach. Business ladv.
3. $100—1 BR. Furn. Student.
3. $160—1 BR. F-F, male.
4. $175—1 BR. Cat. UP. Yard.
5. $184—1 BR. Pool, sauna.
6. $300—1 BR. Child UP.
7. $700—1 BR. Fireplace. .
5. $159-3 BR. View. Baicnty.
9. $301—2 BR. Spacious. Child.
10. $335-3 BR. Heat. Cantral.
11. $242—3 BR. Child. T-housa.
12. $275—3 BR. Dup. Bsmt. Now.
13. $297-3 BR. Yard. Kids. Pels.
14. $400-3 BR. Oak Bay. FP.
HOMEHUNTERS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
1394 HillsMa Ave. 595*5101
CHATEAU VICTORU
740 BURDETT AVE.
2 “ APARTMENTS TO RENT.
Partly furnishad. Both nawly de- [
coratfd, l-badroom self-contained.
Wall-to-wall carpeting. Flrtplaces. >
Clean and bright. $245 and $310.1
Cable T.V. anq hMt auMliad. No
—swimming pool
—swirl pool
—sauna
—racraation room
For further Information call:
BROWN BROS. ON BLANSHARD
_ 385-8771 fanytlmej
16th floor"
Fantastic View
AISS GORDON HEAD RD.
$830.60
STANDARD FURNITURE' |8!l!S S " U S! Zl
~ ~ Uerironi overlooking Hero Strait
land San Juan Islands. 4-Bdrm. 3
baths, DR with sundeck off family
room with fireplace, w*w, appll-
I ances and drapes. Avail. Immed.
For mora Information call;
BROWN BROS, on BLANSHARD
355-8771{anytlmt)
Three Rooms from
$40 per month
Immediate Delivery
382-5111
iios
ai'ahtments
H ANTED
-iS
EXECUTIVE HOME IN GORDON
. Head. New home lived In by build-
NEED A PLACE TO LIVE #r only 4 mot. 1737 sq. ft. finished,
belora November 1. Can you help? . -
My, 4 cats and I art c.Taan, respon¬
sible, non-smoking beings, i work
as a minimum wag# earning veteri¬
nary aid. Would iTke an apartment
in an older building and we have
references. Please phone 595-4060
after 5 or 383-62/0 anytime. Ask
for Diana. Thanks.
RESPONSIBLE PROFESSIONAL
man needs quiet, roomy, light
Apartment in older building or
s^lt house. September Ist. Under
S200. Prefer Rxkiand or James
Bay, must be quality accommo¬
dation. References. Chris 364-4101
weekdays. 595-67X.
MOTHER AND DaIjGHTER, »
yrs. old, wants luHe In older
home. Prefer Rocktend, Fairfield,
Oak Bay or near University. Re¬
sponsible. References. Reasonable
renf. Oct. Isl. 386-0127.
R'ETIREO”TEACHER," ~EARLY
60 s. non-smoker, would like to rent
t or 2-bedfOom unfernished apart¬
ment. up to $325. Cook-Fairfleid
area preferred. 479-4949 after 4:X
weekdays.
MARRIED COUPLE (CARPEN-
ter and Nurse) require suite or
[duplex In older home. Maximum
’ 35 ^ 7072 ''
__ .,v, QUIET SINGLE WORKING MAN
pats or children. X3-0^ after 6: Sauna, ewlmmlng pool, whirl pool, requires one-bedroom apartment
p.m. ;underground parking, hobby room.ior 'arge bacheic' in older home.
, WATERPRONT LUXURY ?„*»» 'fflu'Vk'SKicJ.f'Z‘J
3 Bedrooms, well to wail through-1 1 bedroom suite. Damage deposit
. * ... ,-- ...wk. available.
RRwiv, vwi-G'V-^Vb W11I1WWI PI ■iiiL. 1 — —T-rTTn*^ -Z'Z—^
Heated covered pool, sauna, adults 'O^LUXE SPLITLEVEL PENT-
only. View by appointment, callit*®}J** i'’..**®''*' Woods app.
359-5340. 353-3721 or 3554454. ?,• J *’®''®-
« ■ ■ — ■■■' fridge, dishwasher, 3 balconies.
AVAILABLE lAAMEOIATELY Amen. Incl. Library, Hobby and
2 bedroom suite, balcony, cable- Workshop, Billiard Rm. Tennis
vision. Building located on quiet and ShufNebqard Courels. Pool,
Cul-de-$ac without traffic. HtaiadiSwIrlpoot and sauna. Adults only,
coverad pool, sauna, adults only. Available Sept. 1. $435.00 Per
Vltw by appointment, call X3-5340,1 Month. 353-9212—9:00 a.m.-4:00
353-^21 or 358-6454. i p.m.
PRESTIGE CONDOMINIUM < SEPT I
5th Floor, panoramic vlaw. 2 bad-1 Brand new 3-bedreom duplex, de¬
rooms. 3 baths, range, fridge, dish- luxe ap^Iences, wal-to-well car-
- bMrooms, 1—i-pl^e bath,
3-plece baths. Custom kitchen.
Huge private balcony. Cobble
stone steps, sidewalk and drive¬
way. Drive-ln garage. Panelled
rec. room with custom bar. Ele¬
gant chandeliers. 2 huge fir^
places. Fenced bKk yard. Appli¬
ances not Included. $550 per month
with lease end damage deposit.
House under finishing construction
now. Available Dec. 1st, 1976.
477-9595.
66'x92" plus^ind sm5l1 tixei),
pc. bath plus 2 pc. ensultt — close
to schools, shopping and. bus —
rent to cover carrying charges —
opportunity to purchase on easy
farms (trades considered m down
payment), w. to w. carp^ plus
fridge end range and dishwasher
Included. Dickie Agencies Ltd
382-4312 eves. 477-4662._
TOWNHOUSE
$390 PER MONTH
Deluxe 3-Mroom townhouse, close
to everything, avaliabte Sept. 1st.
Children arid small pets welcome.
Call: 386-3128, 9 a.m. to 5 P.m.
CENTURY 21,
J. D. BOSDET LTD.
I-OWNHOUSES
_-KK..-..W.-, w—.™.. V..- ._ _ . _ ■ LARO-nVOOD
washier, w7sher. dryer, sauna,'’endl^^7#l#crrir'h3rwa7af,'larMl*kttch- YOUNG WORKING MAN WOULD 3 BEDROOMS, VY ^throomi,
pool. Heat and water inciudtd Inien dellohtlui petto with valiay like suita In oldar house. 354-7293. ^ ^**11115''^' oil heat,
Rockland Oak Bay or Fairfield!
References. 596-2308 after 5.
young'” /M'S RI ED COUPLE
looking for apartment or basement
-IN SIDNEY
_'Large, modern 2-bedroom house
WORKING MOTHER, 1 GIRL 12 1 *'*® self<onfained 1-bedroom In-
vrs. old. wants 2-bedroom unfur- lew suite on ground floor. Fridge,
nished apartment by Oct. 1 st. stove, dishwasher, wisher and
Phone 353-5473. dryer, wall-to-well caroeting
UNFURNISHED BACHELOR OR Law^'^ced-ln''*beck*^rd!^*^h
I bedroom apartment, guiet rail- oeck, trees In beck. Close to
Mle women, references, m-7476. schools end shopping. Rent $455.
1-10 e.m.,_efter t p.m. Rhone 656-6745.
WANTED; MIO-PRICED APART-,
ment for young coucle In mid-20s. i
Vlctofle Press Box 49.
mo collect, 753-4693.
COLWOOD AREA, SEPTEMBER
1st, 2-bedroom, newly decorated I
home, liroe yard, stove, fridge,
washer and dryer. Responsible, !
clean tenants only. Child welcome.
No doqs. $295. 479-1357, 479-1 520.
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE OF 3 ' BED-
rooma, large living room, dining
room, drapes, carpet, appliances,
sundeck with beautiful view, $395.
3B3-9327.
8TOKi:s anti DFFICKH
TO RENT
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday 1 to 3, Esquimalt, 1245
Lyail St. 2-bedroom, fult-tasement,
4 appliances, available Immedlate-
IVj_
3 BEDROOM, FULL BASEMENT,
high Quadra area, male' apnii-
ances, hot water heat, $350 per
month. Immediate possession.
382-9706 or 656-4525.
3 BEDRM.. LARGE KITCHEN.
Living rm. has firaplace. $325.00
per mo.
C. N. MONTAGUE CO. LTD
354-9315 656-6145
BURNStDE-TILLICUM AREA
4 bedrooms, broedkxwn llvinf
room with fireplace, suite family.
No dogs. $350 plus utilities.
355-4298 between 13 e nd 4._ _
GORDON HEAD, 3 BEDROOMS,
quiet, secluded with see view, one
acre ^opertv. $375 per month.
477-3397.
LANGFORD, NEARLY NEW 3
bedroom, full basement, fireplace,
one block to school, available Sep¬
tember 1. $425. 4754)511.
CORDOVA BAY BEACH. 2-BED-
room house, watl-to-wall carpeting,
4 eopliencee, $400. References.
596-1954.
FflOfBmiS LTD./ KALTORS
727G — Johnson St.
NOW LEASING
OFFICE SPACE
BETHANY COURT-tS. aq. ft. de-
eccomoaaiion.
- The best In
1®'^'I mlfed space available.
WcKENZ^E — from 450 sq. ft.
elective rates.
ESOUIAAALT •• small office,
442-733 sq. ft. ground floor. '
RETAIL SPACE
FORT ST.^IOOO sq. ft.
SLy:?.'.9F. Z" ' ottly 2300 sq. ft.
ESQUIMALT - 1200 sq. ft. In
^sy mall.
•rime DOWNTOWN
ft.
6000 *q-
LARGE 3-BEDROOM SEAVIEWl
home, 2 firepiKes, references re-1
quired $396. Crofton. 356-3114 be-i
fore 6 p.m.
S H A W N I G A N LAKE WA-1
terfront. oozy new cottage, electric
heating, elsoo furnished. $275.
352-7$n or 475-7922.
DELUXE TOWNHOUSE, 3 BED-
rooms. 2 bathrooms, Unlvarsltv
araa, $400 a month. 479-4564 after 5
p.m._'
EXECUTIVE HOME
Lew then 4 years, ciosa In. saclu-
slon, 6 rm. bungalow plus 550 aq. — ■. ... -
ft. finlahad In lha full basemanf —tlMlOE TWO BEDR(X>M TOWN-
GORGE AREA, 3-BEDROOM
home with third In besement.
available Sept. tst. $350 par
month. 4794796.
Vi block from ocean In
Jamas Bay, bath, fireplace,
$350. call 4n-70S0.
WHY RENT? NO DOWN PAY-
mint. For working couple. 3 bed¬
room, city. 595-5537.
WAREHOUSE
CECELIA- 6600 50. ft.
ESOUIAAALT — 300-6000 to. ft
bay ST.-2000 iTT'o^k load¬
ing.
FV Further Information Confect
M6-3 34 R. D. LAW 475-9474
356-31 24_J, COLWELL_ 479^70
NOW LEASING "
OFFICES
AND
, STORES
Space can be desloned to your
requirements.
IF WE HAVEN'T GOT IT
WE'LL FIND 1TI
AT NO EXPENSE TO YOU
Richard Tal^ or Herb Smith
^lo Canadian Managemant Co.
300-^764 Yatee street
356-5559
lost VANCOUVEI ST. ISMSM
WE SPECIALIZE
IN LEASING
TOP Ql’AUTY Pnjfe.ssional
offi<‘e spai-e in n^w air con-
difioned building on OAK
BAY border. Ample PARK¬
ING 1500 sq. ft.
CENTRAL lUXATlON Is
I the key to many businesses.
New offices just off Dougias
St. offer I'easonabie rent and
jMtrking.
D O W N T 0 W N PROFES¬
SIONAL building. Just com¬
pleted and ready to satisfy-
office requirements, large
or small. Owicrete, air con¬
ditioned and parking.
DOWXTOtTO RETAIL just
(rff the comer of Govern¬
ment and BroughtcKi St. Ex¬
cellent retail or restaurant
location. Also 7200 sq. ft. on
Pandora Ave.
WAREHOUSE — CENTRAL
location, just off Douglas St.,
aizes from 3.000 sq. ft. to'
10,000 sq. ft. Ideal wholesale!
or jobber site.
We have numerous other
buildings for your consider¬
ation.
R. I. MURPHY
B. H. DOVEY
3884454
To
Buy — Build
Remodel — Refinance
Rttan^TATl
PRINCIPAL PROPERTIES
40ee &HELB(Xff1NE
477-9514
lst-2nd Equity Mortgages
arranged or purchased
INTLRDI FINANONG
VERY PROFITABLE GRO¬
CERY BUSINESS INCLUD¬
ING LAND, BUILDINGS
EQUIPMENT. AND FEX-
TURES — FOR ONLY
$9&.500.. PLUS APPROX.
,S15.'000 STOCK. MERT
AGREKM^TS FOR SALE BEATTY 592-3446.
PURaL\SED OR .SOLD
LOANS IX>R ALL AREAS
CXJNSIDERED
Quick Courteous
Confidential
SerN'ice
24-1 lour CoN’erage
D. .MacGILLTVRAY 388-6691
We Specialize In
FINANCING
DEVELOPMENT
WATERFRONT
, RESORT
PARKSVILLI;. B.C.
EXCLUSIVE LISTING
3i>8 Feet of Vancoux’er Is¬
land’s Finest BEACH. Once
In A Lifetime Opr»<>rtunlt>'.
For Details Phone TED
HOBBS 477-9514 (Busk
592-0022 (Res)
1st,and 2nd
MORTGAGE
LOANS ON
ACREAGE,
APT. SITES
Or Most Any
Real Estate
Holdings
ANYWHERE IN B.C.
WHimiiiElr
Inn BLANSHARD
358-4271
FbikJ^ciflc
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE
avellebie In new flve-stqry con¬
crete, fully elr-condjtloned and
carpeted building on Quedre St.
near McKenzie Avenue with emote
on-sIte perking. Architect^slened
interior lev^ and decor. WILL
CONSTRUCT INTERIOR INTERI¬
OR PARTITIONING TO SUIT
TENANT.
Perk Peclflc Apertmenti Ltd.
355-5491
CLOSE-IN, 3 BEDROOMS, 3|
beths. $M. 3^t>fdroom older. $345. |
Phono ev«nlnos 651-5975.__|
riEDROOM' b'aSEMENT SUITE,'
drsoes, fridge, stove, w*li-lo-weti
carpet, tt75 _month^479-4277.
3 BFOROOM FULL BASFMENT, j
fireplece, sundeck, dose to -
Khoou, priv.i. Yird. (MS. 47».3;S4. professional OFFICE
"People Helping People"
RETAIL SPACE
2 BEDROOM HOUSE, UNFUR
nished with laroa garage. $3M oer
month. 310 Meed Street. 479*3I66._
FOR
3-BR HOUSE LESS BASEMENT
$350. 479-7771.
3-BEDROOM HOUSE. $340, 501
Macaulay Street.
NEAR DOWNTOWN, 2
room. $23S month. 356-7t95.
211 HOUSEB TO BENT
FURNISHED
WINDSOR COURT
2 bedroom apartment, $290. No
children or pels, mature adults
pels.! views. Close to schools and shMS.
j Family and small pels welcome.
.Colwoed. $350. 3544912. 593-6625 -01 SHARE
I ACOO.MMODATION
SOOKE
384-1992.
only. Swimming pool, sauna, out- 2 Bedroom apartment, fridge., QUIET FEMALE STUDENT, 19, - tuii k*u.
door, fennis. squash court, ale. stovt. haai end water, garbage^ requires tame to seek and share ’LSni n Sid
Pick-up, children and 1 pal at- accommodation for upcoming,
lowed. $200. Phone Pat Baker .school year. 74-4596, Duncan I’Jfn asm.i?
ai?.3a7e hffn«r rHtmhar - — _, tocts and .sacuriiv. otpoiiT re- or pats. 652-5766.
Ok 5 'Gislasofi dup/axM'^^ G'SI- TO SHARE oulred. Rarrt with odtlon to. pyr '
available at $225. ... . —
fully self-contained suite. Frfdge,
stove, washer, dryer, wall to-wall
carptfng throughout. Share utili¬
ties with upper floor. $200 month.
6564745.
^^INDSOR CX>URTS
BRENTWOOD BAY. OUR WELL
cered for honoe, still being moder¬
nized will be ready and eveileble
to rent, to people who care, from
hrUr f^ovambaf through April, et $250
IstV month. On one lloor with lerq#
^ ' llvlngrpom, separate diningroom,
ltd ***l‘>*c^*«" dishwasher, washer.
Byron Price and Awociatee Ltdj_ dryer, etc. ^ l^droom and
bathroom (2nd badroom, still to
be mod^nlzed will not be usea¬
ble). Fully furnisned as a home
and not lust accommodation. Ref¬
erences please, sorry no children
AVAILABLE NOW
;v;?yne» with ^ama'r $105 cniis:- SWS.W om: Pl^, 382.:i25t PUgNISHED 2 BED-
month plus utilities, 354-9650 after [days or 477-4554 or 592-3573 ave-LR., DR., s^i den w <rt-
?EDR0PH APARTMENTS,i.30. UiPRS._.ciJporil'raL mSL. Sbl.
ONE _
from $t9S. Includes heat and /-.bi
cable. Walking distance to town.i®i5j'
Please call 3M-ni7, between 12;
WANTED TO SHARE EXECUTIVE SPACIOUS 3 BED-
ness* can jm-zji/ narwaan 17 ——furnished .apartment with'room full basement Character
Luxury one- end two-bedroom o®®® f"® * P-m. Sorry no children _ISST*dreoy'fieutifv** tend
•Mrtmmtf, Full r«r«,)[oojl Well- or P«l». _LSTUDENT WITH HOUSE WISHES'K;ulmiSriic<?tJH.tcou?lo, I 0.2
- rh/n,'Ar'* o*™- »«2» •«-1 rwwJr •R^Vrinco "VmuW
or cmitftn piNSA. pno,)t 3E3,S0S9. Ionp-b*droom •pwTmfnt. Stov, And _ >U9a Yotrly ItAM. 385-74M. From
WINDSOR COURT fridge Included. Availeble Immedi'
2 bedroom, 1275; 1 bedroom, $225. etelv. For Informetlon oelt
Swirl pool, ft' swimming pool, 1642-4461.
**uM, Muesh^
pets.
iTure adults.
ESQUIMALT DISTRICT, ONE
bedroom apartments from $193. In¬
cludes heat end cable. Walkiro'
distance to town. Please cell
356-73)7 between 12 noon end 4
p.m. Sorry, no children or pets.
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY, CITY
highrise suite, extramely clean,
planty of extras, laasa avaitebla.
$330, mornines or avaninga. ^
6939.
I-BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM.
Sauna, whirlpool, racraaflon room,
sundack. Opposita Btacon Hill
Park. $223 a month 5994417 aftar 6
p.m.
able now. conveniently located on;^ BEDROOM APARTMENT W»TH
tna corntr of Esoulmalt and Adml- ®P»?h view In Bee^ Hill tree.
rals Road, call 353-4446 or 38M73^
bachelor" UNIT. Lrvi'NG' RM.
with naw W-W carpat and radeco*
rated throughout. Extra large
Kitchan and dining arta. Colwood,
S225. 356-3494.
rent Includes, heat watar, and
cable $275 monthly, plus meny
extras. Mrs. Cheung 4774)790 after
6 p.m.
FOR RENT OR LEASE, SEP-
tembar tst. luxury 1 badroom, 18th
floor, overlooking most of Vktorle.
pool, seune etc.. Included. $270 per
month, 383-5551 efter 4.
CAPSTAN COURT
630 Heed St. New adult oriented
building, 1 and 2 bedroom suites __ _
starting at $215. For mora intor- *:BEDROOM OPPOSITE BEACON
matlon call 3544733. Hjll Park, Ideal for one small
A.. A A ..v>.w:rr.: Neat and light Included, non-
AVAILABLE NOW. 2-2 BEDROOM (smokers. Available Immadfataly.
dP.y.tments., t.\ bedroom. Smal $250. 363-1540, 38S4424, AM. BCwas.
child considered. No pets. Revel -r- — -
Colwood Arms, 344 Golditraem Av- UNIVERSITY PARK TERRACE,
enue, Colwoed. B.C. 471-5325. ene-bedroom condominium evell-
eble September 1st. No pets. $275.
GIRL, 35, TO SHARE APABT.' ® ^® ^ P-*"-' 6 P.m 1 9 p.m.
ment . 425 SImeoe St.. 7 p.m. _MODERN 2-BEOROOM HOUSE
ROOM IN sTbeDROOM HOUSE i**'*^*®*^
for girl. Rent reaaonetXe. 353-9953. '*••**'" 4ir.ni*r»
206 duplexes to BENT
. . Wisher, dryer, flreolace, suit-
deck, iaroe fenced back yard,
wall-to-wall carpeting throughout,
living room drapes Included. Chil-
.. _ gardL— _
protesslonel or retired people, no
children or pets. 1 year reneweble
lease. 1450. monthly. Appointments
to view. Boormen Investment Co.,
Ltd. 1 i n Govern me nt St. 3 8 6-921 2.
2-BEdROOM FURNISHED EN-
gllsh cottege type duplex, bese¬
ment, sulteoie UP to 4 people, pets
end children OK. Close to town.
Sept. 1. $330 per month including
utllitiH. 3I4-979I efter 4 p.m.
dally.
LANGFORD
BUSINESS DISTRICT. HIGH
JIM AAcNAUGHT 992-0355
ALAN U POTTER _
355-5771 (anytime)
BRAND NEW
OFFICE SPACE
inLLSQDE AND WXRK
There areJust three ipeces left of
1,200 sq. ft., 1,500 so. ft. end 550
sq. ft. in this coni^ent loc5tlon.
Tna gilding has air conditioning,
alavelor, Janitorial services, alec-
Irlcltv and parking Included In iha
negotiable rents. For eny funher
Inior.nation ceil:
WILF GEE 356-6796
Vvestmont Realty Ltd.
920 Hillside
386-6796
new'^re'house for'lease
OR SALE
LARGE
FENCED
COMPOUND
ultable for vehicle perking or
CASH VALUATIONS ON
EXISTING MORTGAGES OR
AGREEMENTS GIVEN
WITHOUT OBLIGATION
COURTESY TO FELLOW
BROKERS
PHONE MR. LEN THOAAAS
COLLECT AT 354-7125
Douglas Hawkes Ltd.
990 Blanshard St.
torage, can be parceled ~ into
mailer units. Good access to all'
reas, from cantrally located In-l
ustrlal tot. Phone Gary Ral,'
.6-3414. OK Paving Co. Ltd.
Pacific
Available Sapt. 1st
Prim# Office or Professional Space
Corntr, Ground Floor,
680 sq. ft. on Oak Bay Ave.
Will decorate for tenant.
Rent $350 par mo. includes Heat,
Hot water, and parking.
Phone ^5491 for particulars
PROFESSIONAL OR
COMMERCIAL
OFFICE SPACE TO RENT
830 PEMBROKE
TRY TRUMP
We specialize In
LAND.
CONSTRUCTION
AND
DEVELOPATENT
MORTGAGES
Trump Mortgage
and Development COrp.
SECOND
■MORTGAGES
—No bonuses, brokerege or
finder's fees
—Borrow up to *15.000
—14.9 oer cent on amounts
over $5,000
—15-yeer emortlzetlon
Household Realty
CORPORATION LIMITED
VICTORIA
1218 Douglas St.
382-8156
3459 Saanich Rd.
386-3226
RESTAURANT
Excellent return on Investment.
Sales increesing monthly. In top
treffic tree downtown. Seats 75.
With license. For confidential In¬
terview call 3554271 anytime.
I. G. LIDSTONE
J. H. WHITTOME and CO. LTD.
^micdtofir
^(otmaeJCa
MORTGAGE FUNDS NOW
9 99 t»i\ ^ M _ _^■•vailBbla. Contlhantii Estates Cor-
•?.; PeiTItloned poration. 777 Fort St., 385-6778.
for doctors' offices.
1 area 2700 sq. ft., open
829 ADMIRALS
‘ —1 area 1375 sq. ft.
Rates from $4 sq. ft.
KILMARNOCK HOLDINGS LTD. $30.0
595-2434
MOBTGAGES
FOB SALE
>IR5TS '
» at 12** approx 79% adv.
ONE OF A KINDI BRIGHT, I ®'’«n and pats within reason. $350
sunny, 2 bedroom side by side > mon th. 656-57 45. _
duplex. Avaitebla In Saptambar. i~ ~ «pot T
Lovalv'wd^*'Laroa*u'^na”aTMl ®''®^ ''•'v 3-badro‘'m di-olax, da*
iM ^1^*1 luxe appliance, wall-to-wail carpat, _
Quiet responsible couple. I child, to i^s FemlKi ^ ,* •V®*-
no pets. $340. Phone M2-950.1764, sheo, spirel sfairceie. stone
collect, evenings or weekends. iJtS ^$^i »13 599^35 Tvenrrws^' ''’•Pi®«®' eopllences, Includ-
-- r $350.-84-0912. sya-6620 evenmos. rtiihweehef, washer-dryer. “
WEARS
'jack WEARS
OAK BAY REALTY LTD.
PROPESSjoNAL OR '
OFFICE SPACE TO RENT
830 PEMBROKE
ONE BEDROOM WITH ROUND ’
bed end bedding, vanities. Com-, qoq ArCwi^^, r-
olately reoecorated wall-to-wall 1 O^yAL/MIRALS
throughout, fridge, stove, drapes, ’-•—
washer, kitchen nook, twirl pool
bath, small aasy<5ra-for lot.
Storage shad. 354-900S.
__ _ , $324)00 at 13%_ approx 75% adv
One block off Douglas Sfraat.' LI<!>HTINDU-STRXAL ! $4j!ooo at approx W* adv
A^«s available 2500, 3000 on Look everywhere and thM chon*' SECONDS
**^1 *?■ *!' Sprlnklarad. auto-: me for the best rikln town Only $1*54)00 it 15% approx 50% adv
malic HvcIKrs. Fw lurlhar Ue-! H io pi ai!;,, {So oS, iScl 525,000 at 1I5|> approx 50-, adv
'.y*,,,?'"' •**« “EARS iU Of ati?ut ;,«0 lew ’ aRRTOxWadY
*^98-3321. .New building. 15 n celtlno ' $24,000 at 16^ approx 65^■> adv
GROUND LEVEL OFFICE 13-Phasa. ML 18201 . ' -r^
Approx. 1000 sq. ft. newly ROB OANIELSEN FAIRVIEW A/^NAGEMENT LTD.
carpeted, heat supplied, $ 450 i^5-5171 __ 9854452
-1 area 1,375 sq. ft.
^ Rates from $4 sq. ft.
KILMARNOCK MOLOl^NGS LTD
595-2434
. SEPT. 1
Brend new 3-bedroom duplex, de¬
luxe appllenccs, wall-to-wail car¬
pet, electric hot water, large kitch¬
en, dellghHul patio with valley
views. Close to schools end shops.
Family and small pets welcome.
Colwood. $350. 354-0912, 592-6625
evenings.
AVAILABLE SEPT. 1ST. ALMOST
new 4-badroom family home In
Colwood aree. Main arpiiances,
wall-tc-wall carpat, drapes. Chli-
SI ON Ft _ r«c i a I S/HC rwn KCIV I ' " ---- ---
Modpbm Accire A 400-sq. ft. retail unit now avail-1 phamf pat padicpo
PLevATApf^'AUA^n ®®'* '^®l' ■’ ^3* Yates St.. j antnpWTo **
p IN f.«t. j.n..orm..lpn cpM.C "5£P,U >-10.
— . _CANADA TRUST _ . _ , __
LEASE. CLB.^ BUILDING. ** F®*"
woodwork or light monufec
tyring, haeted, parking. 116 Dallas.
Also on Street, 2 offlca units, 629
David, 477-2104.
$225 DOWNTOW'N
1211 Mharf. Presently used as bou-
tlqua. Includes light, shared heat,
avallabla Saptembar 1. Enquire
353-1239.
3nd $2250 at 11% at $39.54
$2600 it 16% at $39.78
$6,600 at 15% at $96.62
$7,000 at 15% at $104.60
All with Insurance, P.O. cheques. 3
M.I.P. $ year terms, end proven
covenince. Lakevlew Manegement
Ltd. No. 1. 215 6th ' St. Cour-
tenev, 335-5379. In Victoria, call
352-0212.
1(X)0 GovBrnment St.
REAL GROWTH
Established downtown plant shop
for only $9,000, (stock net Includ-
td). Ground floor opportunity for
someone with vision plus Mack Ink
from day ont.
35*4124 MIKE SWEEN EY 352-27 09
eWY MOTEL
Prime corner location on one of
Victoria's main tnoroughfares. Sit¬
uated close to the city centre end
within walking distartce of all
sports complexes, theotree and ail
downtown shops and businassas.
34 UNITS
Harmoniously decorated and beau
tifuliy furnishad plus two-badroom
manager's suite. All units with ex¬
tra-length Queen-sized beds, col¬
ored television, piped-ln musk,
direct dial telephones end thermo¬
statically controlled tamparafure.
16 units with kllchenatts. Covered
parking and elavaor service to all
units. BERT COLES, 354-1001 or
Res. 992-3311. Tho Royal Trust Co
LIVE LIKE A
GENTLEMAN FARMER
artd make money at it on this 6
acres with 524X10 iq. ft. of green-
house with a quota, autonvafad to
grow long English cucumber via
the hydroponic method. Supply
can't keep up with the demand for
this poDular crisp end detsctible
flavored vegetable. ' Vendor win
eisisf In instructing you to make
you one of the successful growers.
There Is also a modern immacu¬
late 3 plus 1 bedroom family home
and rgom for other Ktivitlas -
money making or otharwisa on the
land. Price for this pKkage only
$2594100 A6L$
354-^ BUD ZUCK 591-7215 The
Royat Trust Co, _
WHOLESALE
EGG FARM
This opportunity Is not aa a pro¬
ducer or a retailer. As a whole¬
saler you can gain top dollar for
your product. Work by yourself or
with your family and expand this
business whkh has a strong local
demand. Faaturas are 13 acres,
farm house, *750 sq. ft. chicken
orading room. Priced at
$175,000 plus quota and stock. F^
mora Information call
DANNY Ai\ASS€N
4n-15*1 47I-7C0I
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
$5,000 OFF
Now only $79,900, GOOD BUSI¬
NESS location In n. Saanich,
/LOCAL COMMERCIAL ZONING
SOON TO BE FINALIZED). Com¬
fortable 1200 sq. rt., full bsmt,
stavlew home on 0.72 acre. Can be
converted to offices or stgra. MLS
'19104.
RETAIL STORE FOR RENT
PRIME RETAIL PROFESSIONAL
or office space. 400 so. ft. street FIRST MORTGAGES
level exposure. Self-contained. 16% INTEREST
. LOAN-VALUE RAT.O Wi
jaa-ysvf or 3f5-7444. .These mortgages will go fast, ap- Ai ADCI /*D A/“l/
,praise) avallabla. Excellent cova-j fViADuL ^KAL,I\
1 355-7761 24 hrs. 6554594 Res
SrD'NEY’ PR0^F'E’rs”l"0N AL.ME P ^ HANLEY AGENCIES LTD
CENTRE. 9775 4TH STREET _' Ste. 120-727 JohnstOl
JHPORMATION, PLEASE|5^ SQ. FT. AVAILABLE SOON.-
•o70
TWO-BEOROOM, $210. 1019 ROCK-
land. Quiet street, walking dis¬
tance downtown, older people only.
SoTV, no children, no pets. Phone
after 12 no on. 38*4767._
2-BE0R'0OM”surTe, 1200^0. fH".
living room, dan with flraMaca,
larna kitchen-dinetta, bathro'im
. 1325.
1- AND 2-BEOROOM SUITES FOR
Saptembar 1st, broadioom, drapes,
appliances, swimmino pool, sauna.
Adults, no pats. 124 Bay Street.
36S-S092.
479-5645 or 598-4292.
ONE-BEDROOM APARTMENT,
1150. Yourw working couple pre¬
ferred. 384-5276, between 7-10 even¬
ings.
1-BEOROOM SUITE AVAILABLE
September tst. No children or
pets, resident maneger, 5954061.
Between 94.
THREE 1-BBDROOM DELUXE
suites for September 1. Mature
adults only. Sorrv, no children or
pats. Apply 1576 Mldgard, 477-9*69.
APRIL AMNOR
COOK-fAIRFIELD AREA, 1 BEO-I?S30 Wark St. Bachelor suite, $165,
room suite, fridge, rang*, t-tit,''nvnedlafety. i-bedroom suite,
cable TV. laundry facilities, con-|$16S'September 1. 363-1042.
■;®|(jj •''7®'?ce.. Suitable. fqr.mld.lspri>nwTTrix
dieSnad or older lady. 479-5665.
•|SELF-CONTAlNBO BACHELOR
_ suite, In older home Vancouver
I and Rxkiand area, $165 a month.
CENTRAL - - ___
Available Saptember 1, 1 bedroom. Available September I. 262-4969.
stove, fridge and drapes, wall tO'CTnnirt pamtacti/- f^acabli
wall shag. View bv appointment.
Call 353-5340^2-3721 or 355-6454. ^?}f®r®^A5f'^’ll'?’'-f’.®®'L_*Y'Jt!'
BACHELOR SUITE! MODERN
building Esquimalt. $155 per
month. Avaliabte Aug. 3ist.
382-6724 evenings.
EXECUTIVE 2 BEDROOM, 2
bathroom sauna, whirlpool, Esqul-
malt are*. 656-4575.
BACHELOR APARTMBHT Vic¬
toria West, fridge and stove, clote
to bus, $165. ’4JM0S5.
ESQUIMALT
2-bedreom suite, good view. Avell-
eble now. 4 suites. 3554532. _
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT IN
Sooke, tits per month. Phone
643-3211.
BACHELOR AND ONE BED-
reom, hardwood floors, no children
or pets. $149 and $172. 356-9142.
COUNTRY LIVING, CLEAN,
bright basement suite, older couple
only. 653-3446.
2 BEDROOM BASEMENT SUITE
for $229. AveHable September 1
354-6073.
ONE CHILD WELCOME
529 Admirals Rd. New modern
building. Call Mr. Holgafa, 595-
2227.
METCH05IM WATERFRONT, 1
bedroom, heated. Sorry no pets.
$275. September ist. Reply Vic¬
toria Preu, Box 139.
OCT. _15T. 2 BEDROOM CON.
dominium. I9ih floor. Ocean end
city views. Many extras. $365.
314-2927.
201 APARTMENTS TO
RENT FURNISHED
PETS WELCOME
Ona badroom apartment, Sept.
598-6330. after 5.
SUBLET, OAK BAY, l-BED-
room, Saptembar 1-Apri| 1, suit
quiet older women, near ell ame¬
nities, $300. 5914208.
SE L F-CON TAIN E D~i”‘B E D ROOM
basement euite, $175 Including utili¬
ties. Fairfield. Quiet mature par¬
son. 386-7613.
, ; MODERN NICELY FURNISHED 1
■' I bedroom suite, $215. Rtspomlbla
adult. 477-2101.
PRIVATE 1 BEDROOM SUITE. FAIRFIELD, ONE-BEDROOM,
I® JejhOi Bay. for Sapt. 1st. next »o Shopping and tennis court.
M-i370. t225 . 596-3267.
ninutai away. Saptembar to May
Jo pats. $350. 743-546 6. . ..ri.c« --v
CALL TOM WATKINS ”at ''^.207 I Naar^lTubiTee Hospitai!'siiu ecf.oun-
Sh "■ “‘■’■PAaFic stfat, in;cVVK'r*„'«E“W,i,/T.u.‘
ErAicJiV^*".5CtiS!'S"473.7U7!l» -__
AVAILABLe—SEFTEMBEA 1. , [‘.fiji” TORRENT FT.. FIRST FLOOB,
A~A^ (AAV ;lo 3 bedroom, full besement home. ao' •»
<inp nv <1r»c ftiim cv iFirtpiece, frldoe, end sfove. approx, aso sq.
SIDE BY SIDE OUFLEX ,G^r.g. •« wklhop., E«r. !,'lrV’S^. AvxWi '
IK?'*;?:I store for rent.
Inq rm., kitchen. 4 pee. bathroom,
lull besement end drive-ln garage.
Available Sect. 1 Rent Uto.oq
530 Broughton St., 3IB-S555
ROOMS, I
Phone 246-9454 efter MoncSev.
I 794416.
Hydro'^and^^xrt * water Included'HF6D - 1670 BISLFV ' H®n^® »lP<i9re._Waii end Redekop !
T^ant shares heat. *Renge end j®'.FROFESSIONAL OR
fridge Included. $425 per month. I®®'® _Se^®.»"'y_ *»!•. _ CO/^ERCIAL OFFICE
BRAND NFW JUST VftxxDi ctFa 365-2461 Swinerton, Fjj* ft. office In brand naw -
Oi«ltx «T«flttx. MIO. 477.WIS._ »V7*I*
nlgen Lake. -- . . . i
_ Fireplace. 4 bad-1 GLANFORD AREA
rooms, well-td-well carpet, sami-1 Beautiful naw spacious home (four
furnished, 10-month lease begin-ibadrooma) cloia to Khooli and
ning Seot. 1st to June 30th. $370
par nwnth. For further Informa¬
tion plaaae phone 478-0369 or
471-3461.
VIC WEST AREA. AVAILABLE
September 1. Lovely beamed cell¬
ing, 2 bedrooms, fireplace, fridge,
stove, hear, quiet adults cnTv.
Damage deposit required. Rent,
$325. 356-0661 evenings.
ous line, fully developed basement,
all landscaped, $490 to reliable
tenarft. 47945U before noon.
CROFTON AREA
Available Sept. 1, 1976, 3-bedroom
soiiNavel home, teevlew. close to
Khools, 1’/b baths, fridge, stove,
diihwesher, washer and dryer In-
eluded. Meny extras. 246-3544.
1400 SO. FT. HOME, 3 BED-
rooms, modern kitchan, excellent
firaplace end part basement, very
large yard, ctoaa to schools and
shopping, $360.00. Rebate on rant
to good tenant. 362-6622, 362-4321.
AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 1.,
1-bedroom side bv side duplex with
full basement and garage. Water
and cabtavislon Included. Handy
location. No pets. $260 par month.,
356-6149.
v/*/-AMT~«irir-p-BWT7;r;r-^.i i i-bedroom house, james
VACANT; BUILT 1969 SIDE DU- Bay, $350 par month. 2 lirtplacts,
bedrooms, 1*^ Mvingroom, diningroom, family
baths, ^IlHy room, private drive-lroom, folly ferpe"ed, uililtles In- i ^
way Near downtown, schools, Ic I u d e d . References required.'213
buses Stove, fridge, no pets $3591355-0*36.
353-1304. 477-7336
BRENTWOOD BAY 2 BEDROOM.
2 beth seevltw home. All ameni¬
ties. Availeble from Fall fo Spring.
Transfer dates flexible. $400 per
month. 652-3324.
2-BEDROOM COTTAGE START-
Inq September lit in Shawnlgan
Lake. Furnished. $IW monthly.
353-7350.
COWICHAN LAKE WA-
tarfront, 3-tadroom house, $180.
385-7Q55._
12X64 AAOBILE HOME. FUR'
i?nu"':ir4ML„'crcM“;iss i
per month. i
Wdcteod S95-J273 !
weSTALL AAANAQEMENT LTD.
.MOKTGAOE LOANS
:>nd l.NSUBAN CE
1 St - 2nd - 3rd
MORTGAGE
LOANS
ADMIRALS SQUARE NO bonus
- . - - . - 1315 Eiguimelt Roed INO DISCOUNT
Shawnlgan Lake, eveileble Sept. 7200 square feet, alr-conditloned. 1^0 HIDDEN CHARGES
1st, $330 vdth all utilities Included, retail and profaasional office space •
743-2646 or 996-7053. available. Complaft with well to "--
^11 carpet. Ideal location with
nreat and mall access. For laaa-
ing Information, call 358-5471.
Examples
Borrow Pay Monthly
$ 2.900 $ 34.23
$ 5400 $ 68.46
$10,000 $136.91
$15,000 $205.36
Secure Short Term ist and 2nd. in¬
terest paid monthly. Call Bob
Geddas. 477*9514.
PRINCIPAL MORTGAGES LTD.
4085 Shatbourne St.
Victoria, B.C.
1ST MORTGAGE FOR SALE ON
private hima In ParksvIlla, $25,000
at 11 %. 3 year term. Excallant
covenant, subataniial discount or*
fared. Call 752-9550 or 752-9153.
Private.
2Sa W ANTED TO BORROW
MORT gXg e! $12400 AT ~i$“
3-year term, peymenti of $500.
per month. For details contact N...
McKanzta, Boorman investment i money Immedlelely.
Government St. I Perfect buslneu for the semi-re
386 b7521. -
RESTAURANT
This is an cxcaptlonally good rea-
taurant in a prim# area-aeatinp
^ separate dining room. For vour
Intimate dining praaaurt. Prke in¬
cludes business, fixtures end
eowipment. Fully licenced, this
^siness hes been ste^y Incraas
ing month gftff month. Asking
$[M,000. MLS 17250. View with LS
ART EVANS 655-5924
The Royal Trust Real Estate Dept
ESTABLISH YOURSELF
AS AN OWNER OPERATOR
IN THE MULTI-MILLION
DOLLAR AMUSEMENT
^ INDUSTRY
- - Company secured location and
Mr equipment starts you earning
BUILDER
Requires short term funds, fully
secured by mortgage. Intfest 16%
end up. Provision for rollover to
initrested investors. 3564130.
I.i
nished, $W month. Adults'onlvrVn
Sooka. 656-5056.
DOWNTOWM SOOKE
Prime new seaview office spaces.!
Available Seot. 1, '76. Sized ao-i
prox. 22S to 375 sq. ft, Can be
mwa ••'■oer If raqulrad. For. fur- No amounts too small or too large
iher_detaik phone 642-3321.
Bl'SINESR
OPI»ORTIINmF.R
1S-vear amort. — 5 veer terrr
WATERFRONT
IIOl'SES WANTED
TO RENT
^ RENT OR SALE
^prox. 2,400 sq. ft. In new build¬
ing. Divided into 3 targe rooms
and office with kitchen facilities.
Money immediately availeble
BAKERY BUSINESS
DUNCAN
Enioyinq a good reputation locally'
with an excellent sales volume
rirsf cias' equipment Including
stainless steel mixers, new show-
ceset. etc. Owners returning to
Denmark — reason for salt. Ask-
incj $35,000. MLS. For fi'^ther In
tired person.
For full Information piaaaa write
Tara Industrl#* Ltd. o. Box
4216 P.S. "A" Victoria, b.c. (112)
2 94-6011. _
SHOE BUSINESS
Very well established, axcailant
V *>l"me shoe b 'finest for sale in
Victoria araa. Present laasa at $340
car month. Has 30 months to run.
.'n then be renewed. For further
information pleat# call HUGH
YEREX 592*2507 or res. 479-8149.
WHYTE 8. GOWr^R DAK BAY
PROPERTIES LTD.
2227 Oak Bay Avenue
GARAGE
& EQUIPMENT
SIDE-BY-SIDE DUPLEX — 2 Beautiful 3-badroom, 2-bathroom o r 656-4076 evenings!
KaWf-AAma <lra)aAa _ __ _<7.. a .- ___ M*. AvnaAtInn fli-ar AhIM lulak -. . . . *
r < ^ raciiiiies. .XX . /pi-nv i i i ''''1 ».’4-UU0. MLS. FOr fl'^thtr In- _
.?J! w A. (Bl ) Hodason tK®®’*®?.®'*®*® c«ll BBv coo- ®:«»1 tklenfUi ne.'e tor the riant
AA*54-*419! ' ' ^ ' PER., 745-i020, or Block Bros. Re- ..
bedrooms, firelaca, stove and
fridqt. Full basemanf. 3066-3065
Tillicum. Rent $320.00 eech side.
September 1st. GARDNER REAL¬
TY 355-7721.
- BEDROOMS WITH FRtOOE.
stbyt and ell furnace. Near
K-Mart and University, ideel for
couple vrlth 2 childran. $340 par
month. 477-1747.
SEPTEMBER IST., 2 BEO-
rooms, near Camoaun Colltga, oil
heat, stove, fridge, firaplace, 8250.
Working adults prtftrrad. No pats.
References. 356-0004.
NEW 3.BEDROQM. IW BATHS,
w-to-w carpeting, appliances, sun-
deck. Colwood area. Sapt. 1st.
$375. No 0 *ts. 471*2523.
SIDNEY. 3.BEDr 60M DUPLEX
for rant. No pats. Rtfarences re¬
quired. Further Information phone
656-4003.
home. 4 miles to city centre. Secu¬
rity down payment. $525 a month.
479-2425, days. October 1.
JUBILEE, 3 BEDROOM HOUSE
for rant, full basement, fridge,
stove Included. $350 par month.
Aveilabla immadlataly. Rtfarencai
required. Phone 642-9009.
QUIET, CONVENIENT SAANICH
location, ^Ight 2-3 badroom family
homa with many axtrai. Sep-
lembar througii Jw®*- 1877. $350.
356-5572.
LAKEHILL - 3 BEDROOAAS,
carport, utility room, fIrapiKa, oil
haat, large yard. $300 monthly.
References. Avallabla Sapt. 1st.
479-5156.
pit, axpactlng first child, wish to
rent older 2-bedroom house or du¬
plex by October 1. Hava older,
wall trained dog. Rant up to $290.
willing to maintain yard and do
minor raoairs. 3824315, or 642-5705.
RELIABLE COUPLE, 2 SCHOOL
children, pats, plants, need funky
old 3 badroom homa Sapfambar
1sf-15th. Sooka araa, off main
road, repairs In axchanga for low
rant. 642-3155.
URGENT; MATURE WORKING
couple with child need a 2-b^
room accommodation for Sap¬
fambar ist. Excallant rafertncaa.
ReasonaMa rant. Close to town.
595-5401.
OFFICE SPACE
Now available approximately 1326
sq. ft. space in modern air condi¬
tioned professional building op¬
posite city parkade. Partitioned
»rpetad. Reasonable rent.
M.E.P.C. 353-4165.
GORGE AREA, FOUR BED-
rooms, character family home. 2
flraplacas, large rec room, garage,
available September 1. $425 per
month. 3554925.
COUPLE WITH 2 CHILDREN I
deeperetelv need 2-3 bedroom
^ HASHNA COURT
New. modem officee, wholesale
and warehouse complex, idtallv
located at 3347 Oak Street. Ample
parking, coma and compare. A. S.
Bains Development Ltd. 384-5016.
sp^ on Fort Street Is reesonablv
prked with parking avaitebla.
Heat and light Included. Phone
AV. Sawyer, 3584225.
house bv Sept. Ist. Excellent local
-. references. Prefer house In the
$425 per, country. 3$6-9607.
bedroom RgTAIL STORE AVAILABLE
NOW. ''-*- —
OAK
..Downtown location. 810 so.
ft. P7S. oer month, heat included.
Call M. StMla-AAortlmar 356-6691.
Roberts tnvastmants Ltd.
385-2458
EVENINGS: 355-4521
. t4*hour Sarvlc*
Byron Price and Associates Ltd
MORTGAGE
FUNDS
24 Hour approvals
lit-2nd and 3rd. Mortgages
Short and long farm
Wa art seaclaHsts in unconven¬
tional financing
H. HEOEN REALTY
.. ^’5 BURNSIDE EAST
MORTGAGE DEPT. PH. 355-4014
MORTGAGES
Wa have funds avallabla for 1st
and 2 nd morteaoas with flexible
terms. Rates begin at 1)%««.
P. R. BROWN
AND SONS LTD.
BAY, 3.BEOROOM DU-i i,mi\/bo«itv 7^71 i RESPONSIBLE WORKING COU-|—-
plax, firaplace, fridge and stove, ijNiVERmy^AR^, attrac- pte with pets raquira older two orSTORAOE OR WOODWORKING
fi'Ti hksement. $350, Sapt. 1st, ^!!j'® 1® flulet,three bedroom house withinishop In SIdnsv, 32'x60' Available 7*9 cat* ci"
S95-6292, 59549 36. ^f' oreater victerla tree. 3554606. ||^edlat^?!^Fy further ■
OAK b'ay, SIDE DUPLEX, 2 month. Call 477.2766, *IyOUNG COUPLE AND DQC ' * (Funas avan, __ ..
5®?-?®?!?' ?!®Y9' - ‘.•r,^''®J® ®‘‘* '• LANGFORD SHOPPING CENTRE,’ •nd 2nd mortgages. Corrfacl;
f iFunoi ivaitibfe )i.,medlatefv for
dcivid bun ltd.
, irson. Tourist location but lots of
local traffic. Books open to Insoec-
tan-and snows njod re‘ n. Nesr
Duncen. Call EDNA MEL5AARD
_ . »f Canada Parmanant Trust,
Over 5 ecrai zoned Muitloi* tami-'745-5105 or writ# 55 Station Siraot.
ly. Terms available at $775,000. O.ncan. B.C.
ROSS HARVEY -----
^nfury 21 — Eagle R«i»v.
,alty Ltd., 0^can^_746-^75.
PARKSVILLE
P.O. Box 1060, ParksvIlla, B.C.
245-6)91
APPLICATIONS REQUESTED
fv laasa of sports shop 7n tn#
Racquet Club of Victoria, 39M
G^don Head Road—private sport-
InjTfacility with approximately 800
memberships. Closing date for an-
BIG CHANCt::
A complete flfnMs centre with
swimming pool, seuna, whirlpool
and all exercise equipment for
ula In Port Albarnl. ideal sltue-
tlon tor a fitness minded couple.
$ 20,000 and^good crtdif rating will
suttica as down payment. Ove' 400
existing members. Long term
east. Call CaC Ic S'eeie Peaitv
Ud. 3^255 or Cedric Steele at
SALT SPRING ISLAND
MOTEL, 39 UNITS, DININ'*,
swimming. Grouing over $5,400
tinit. $1*0,000 cash will Niv t*-'' «...
$500,000 property on busy highway. '=!l®*®0®®
Mots, arranoed. Call Cart Pric* m J'^®®^1'Ut;.0®ly $10,600.
Cooper Agendas Ltd., Trail, B.C. RON M^ITGG.W
Phone n 2-?65-5222 or 11^362-j^^9, ' S37-S521 (Days) 537-9220 (Eves.)
Vv'ail r qe''«k‘‘o Realty,
Box 570, Ganges, B.C.
HOTEL
F 'll faC'’llies. r»fr pa'lour,
lounge, cafe, two suites, 24 rooms.
c?uftr rarlor. separate 3 bedroom
SERVTCK f^ATtnv
Established heavy traffic location.
Two bews. Modern *-uipmanl. Cell
JOHN SHAVER a547l4. Douglas
Rea l ty L td.
RANSPORTATION COMPANY
1655 FORT ST.
314-9339 1 Cowichan.
or sale. 749-3481 or 749-3221 Lake, home. Phone owner for vlawina
(and deialls. 112-2464122
BtftlNESS
OrPOBTUNITIES
5 STORKS Mid LIVING QTRS.
A’^AJOft ROAD
Start own bualness. Sovo
goodwill. Torrific location. Nat¬
ural location for lupermarkot,
reitaurant, hardware or sporf-
irw eoodt. Two itores of near¬
ly IWO Id. ft. Each stilt avail-
aole. Easily combined. 40‘’a
leased. Property Is worth
aoout SUS.OOO when leased. Ur¬
gent sale reouir^. $IJ9,000.
MLS. FRANK WILLS at
lltl-3344.
ACTIVITY PLUS
In this U unit Motel along the
Gorge Strip. Excellent accom¬
modation for an owner opera¬
tor. Immaculate condition
mrouahout. To view call:
AAARJ NAPPER at 5ei4M4.
EARN ABOUT M.000
GROWING BUSINESS
A fast food operation that is
truly being accepted in the
area. On a site adiacent to the
busiest shopping centre in the
wnoie area. Easily managed.
Minimum of upkeep as every¬
thing is now. Building was en¬
gineered for this specific
operation for maximum output
with minimum stops. Asklr-
prlca of $79^)00 Includes
*40 BUSINESS
OP FOBT UXITIES
FO'r*SALE, modern™ 3™ BAY
high vol&me service stetlon and
repair business end loose for sale
in Colwood aree. Phone Norm et
479-34I4.
m
BI SIVESS OPPOR.
TUMTIES WANTED
’14 REVENTE PROPER-n'
CLIENT HAS CASH FOR A
travel business. Will consider part
ownership. Will locate as far away I
as Chilliwack or Haney but would •
prefer Vancouver, Nanelmo or
VIctorle. Comact Frank Beamish;
Realty, 503 Yates St., Victoria.
3&5-5n3 or Res. 593-2130.
!(§reen
3cres
>44 REVENX'E PROPEBTV M7
CO.MMERCIAL OB
S44 REVEM E .PROPERTY
3 Vi Percent
Exclusive Residential
' HENDERSON REALTY
345-9741 (Anytime)
DUPLEX
SIDNEY
< Very brigh side-bv-side - eacn
suite has 3 bedrooms, family sized
living room, dining room, and full
basement. Quiet corner landscapeu
lot. Convenient fo ferries, marinas.
Ctfrks, Beacnes. Asking I7|.90d
BILL McCarter bob gibson
<9<-.-$70 454-5153
bit); Coloni0t Victoria. B.C. Sunday, August ‘11, lyle
HOVSES FOR S.AU; | ;.«> HOUSES FOR 8.U.E IJM HOI'SE.S FOR SALE ’tS* IIOI'SES FOR SALE
$33,900
Must Be Sold
"People Helping People '
COOK STREET — $325,000
Virtuallv 100*i» occvpancv in
past years. 11 suites plus a
bachelor accommodation.
Some tenants have been In up
to 10 veers. All ledv occugency
except caretaker. Owner will
consider all types M trades to
SISu.OOO financing available.
Few blocks from the park.
Recent sale collapsed. Call:
FRANK WILLS at 594-3344.
I TERRIFIC VALUE
ADJACENT TO PARK
HIGH QUADRA $/9.9O0
A nice duplex with e huge 1500 i
sg. ft. main level suite with I
huge rooms. Would you celieve;
a I4'/3 x 30 living room. lOxUVj
dining room, hug# kitcnen
and 2 large bedrooms. Well to
well everywhere over hard¬
wood. Lower suite is 1200 sq.
ft. with hardwood floors. Liv¬
ing room is I4’^x17, plus large
dining room and kitchen. Lis- orArvv/ oi iii r\
ten lo this. Bedrooms are' READY TO BUILD
PLANS. PERMIT ANO'’^
FDR 19-SUITE con- m THE MARIGOLD
. Tl lour^ THE NEW SPtciKum eovnr
aCTTv Rileio i JUST LISTED. MIN- SCHOOL. FULLY DEVELOPED' for oel
ChI!dren._Cal1 BETTY McFAR-j imaL .CASH REQUIRED. FULL *0 xtin 0 ano^t .
1031 VANGQUVDI T.
BEACON HILL
PARK
CONDO. SITE
TOWN THIS WEEK- SO ARE OF.
FERINC THEIR HOME AT A
BARGAIN PRICE. REAL GOOD
living ACCD^dOATlON WITH
7 OR 3 BDRMS, jURGE KITCH.
EN. 1-PIECE BATH. FURNACE
ROOM. 2 BORMS AND 3-PCE.
BATH UP. EXISTING 91}^
FIRST A^ORTGAGE CAN BE AS¬
SUMED.
Canada Trust Canada Trust i,. .n,l
No. 9-1537 Hillside Avc. 595-5)71
. 9-1537 HlllfJoe Ave.
DON'T W'ATT
$47,900
JUBILEE 4-PU!J.\ DUPLEX
price of $79J)00 Includes all CiJp V
eouipment. Including^, soft Ne jlOP A ilue
cream machlng. bulWlng,. sign, ^lose to hoopitals In a good renia-
outskfe lighting. to Asth city'I wn tie erea. 2 bedrms, no bsmt, ap-
decklngs Mid tutidlng on a 19-^'" ; prox. 700 sq. ft. each side. Lot sire
solid land lease for another 10 we.yw. ^ 75x130 helps make this a good
-avC ntTXT PV ^Ell**^*’*^ 'n an exclusive residential
WILLS at 594-3344. DL PL,t,X .18440. i7W ano 1W5 Bay St. One gf Fairflelb, without doubt
N. Shelboume ?'**• vacent and earfy possession of Victoria's finest stately
i« (in««{hu -- ., magnificent
halt, a grand
LAND, PHYLLIS COUTTS OR’ PRICE 4244
FRANK WILLS at 594G344. •'**'^*^ S4*a.FU3.
JACK MEARS OAK BAY
REALTY LTD.
SUPERB 8 SUITE
MANSION
NEW OFFICE
WAREHOUSE
; office-a^ view the picture ceta-
595-51711 loqu*. 1125 Douglas St. 342-9191
3447 Shelbourne St. 477-0141.
USE OUR BRIDGE -
FINANCING plan TO BUY
THESE HOMES NOW .
Finding the down payment for that 1 For our Open House on Wednesday
new honw bef^e ^ sell your old!or you may be loo late for a very
jtan be • headache.^ We have attractive (Tudor exterlof) clean.,
the cure. It $ called Bridge Fi- well designed 3-bedroom town- -r ■ •
nancing. If you buy your home, house located close to Simpsons-'This 3 BR condominium Is Idaxi
thf^h us, we II grant Seers 00 a quet cul4t-sa<. please i for children with mrMflon rooms
at r» Interest charge UP to 4504)00 I call to view: MLS 19234. included and public recreallm
AREA.I for ;^e[t months, depending on the , TONY BROGAN closed. Close to sh^lrwstova’
present honf>e. A8ki3i*.6l7$ (pager 2472) 595-5171 fridge. Va«S fully^-w'all
-- ^EVELOPED'for oetails. 1 JOHNNY HAYDN .cluc&d and^only 9 m^ths old
FULL; UP ANO DOWN. 2 BORMS, 1 344-4275 (pagar 3424 ) 595-5171 MLS 14817 (^11 anvt^ ter in
AREA “uARGr l'iVING °R00M AVi:NrK ^ .. *
MAS FLR-CEIL1NG F.P. FAMILY Built with a voung family in mind,
— _. ... ..... . 3-ba^oom ^fudpr design
10‘.b Financing
3 Bedroom
$41,500
NEW LISTING
'‘aaIlE^circle L**b V' .’’'■“I''' WESTCOTT
<t. let. All wall, botll Marlor,SHAKE ROOF ON QUIET
ano txterlor araa camaM CULADEASAC. EXCLUSIVE
block, tor a quiet operation, i LISTING 449.900.
All floors are hardwood with 1 GEOFF SINGLETON
>et over. Fully furnished I or 345-4771 (anyt rne)
operated ■
. HANLEY AGENCIES LTD.
iS8'*'c*. _ .
monlhly basis with minimum ‘ FAIRFIELD
?l!.i'*S*'SfeIK«7oai’i?’'thI attractive home plus rev
a net ot afbOUrsA2LQSI. to tne ewne no Amn rtrkuuM niiDi c»
Fairfield Revenue
This excellent Income-producing
Wlabla. UjiTctian unll. with p?9y2“,Ion. houiakaoplng .com. Nat In-
2 Sleeper units. Urgent sale pjrcplacfs*^drm'iC^"' 4 44.000 per year. Good
d?2ffic*^tMifl«*trada“" iSucti2 A^ '<^'TCHEN ^US 2 SfeORMS^^
Jifi Sid tJbi.'‘“N,*m*Ti?i? 10 }fNT. u^ David Billingham
becausa of It's site ar^ locat vllT if,TruVi,f^&;iTH mwiNr: 344-4424
tion. AaklM 42594)00. FRANK Isi* lIrGF LO^ WITW BAf x
.WLLLS.at 5[4:3344,. 479,900^ “ ^ BAYSMORE REALTY LTD
■DOUG LAWSON 85-2444 1004 FORT STREET
JIM KENNEDY 5W-9074,_. _
mansions with
beamed reception _ . . __
staircase, and eight luurv suites
grc'sing in excess of STOJMO. The
location, the grand architectural
concept, and superb Individuality
of the one and two-bedroom suites
make this an exceptional Invest¬
ment at lust 41944)00. Full details
on this exclusive property from;
477-1141 TED WALPORD 591-1420
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD
OVER 3400 SQ. FT. OF WARE- GOOO' SIZE
HOUSE AND 3000 SQ. FT. OF OF- sjs.SOO.
BATH DOWN. ATTACHI
PORT. STUCCO EXTERIOR.
- - --
PRICED AT
FICE WITH 13 PARKING,
STALLS. ABSOLUTE TOP QUALI-1
TY CONSTRUCTION. JUST OFF I
DOUGLAS Sf. NEAR AAAYFAIR>
CENTRE. WHY RENT? JUST
LISTED, PRICE $225,000.
REG SCHUAAAKEP
594-2333 or 345-4771 (anytime)
BRENTWOOD
6997 Hagan Road
A NEW HOME OP SUPERIOR
QUALITY ON A TREED LOT,
.CLOSE TO MARINAS. ATTRAC-
DUPLEX PLUS
Bief^armanent
"Revenue and
Residence"
BALLIE
THE BEST
BUSINESS
Opportunity
On the Island, this
con be yours for a
reasonable down
payment. Located in
Campbell River this
"Little Giant" groc¬
ery store is a real
money maker. Price
includes land, build¬
ings, equipment and
stock. For further de¬
tails contact:
Larry Wagner
386-3231 (on Pager) Canada Permanent
BLOCK BROS. Trust Company
REAIJY LTD. _::::r
Restaurant for sale in a fast grow¬
ing town on Vancouver Island. The
restaurant equipment has been
purchased recently, and there is a
liquor llcanse. The building has >
5240 sq. ft. on the main floor and
tne walls are built with concrete
bixkt. roof Is ter and gravel. It
has two nice apartments upFaIrs,
that will bring in a revenue. |
BEACON HILL
PARK
SIDE X SIDE
$74,900
This is an excMIent duplex pre¬
sently reollng at $710 per month i... .
with the owner living In one three-1454^454
bedroom unit. Could easily be
rent^ for $1050 per month. Locat¬
ed near Hillside Shopping Centre.
This duplex Is within wenclno dis¬
tance to all services and all levtia
of education. An excellent invest¬
ment at the asking price of only
$130,000. For furthar Information
pieaee call:
SUBHASH SHABMA
477-1041 479-4933
BLOCK BRDS. REALTY LTD.
CENTRAL
iCOMMERc'lAL SITE tWlS?
f i P I 8 B P L A C E , SEP. DINING
IH ROO** AND weLl • designed
-ideal family kitchen. 3 BED-
FDR PROFES-1 rooms (MASTER ENSUITEI,
SIONALS. iTOF DUALITY WALL TO WALL
R MURPHY THRCX,UHOUT. THERMO PANE
homo offers 1150 sq. ft. of comfort-
able modern living. 3 bedrooms
(master ensulle) LR with brick
fireplace, OR has view of park and
the basement has roughed in
plumbing and large rec room. You
must see to eopreciete the quaitfv
end meny features unique to the
asking price of $44,500. MLS 74174.
RICK KALLSTROM
5954171 (anytime)
NEED A 2 BDRM. HOME?
WANT A1 AC PLl.rS
PARADISE?
Do you have $93,900? I have e
beautitui 2-b^oom home in Sid¬
ney set on over 1 acre of flowers
and garden, all Immaculately kept.
A greet place to live with land
having good future potential.
DOUG POSKITT
595-5)71 477-0445
TEMAN 477-0141.
8 Suites Plus
3 Br. Owners Suite
For Sale or Trade
WINDOWS. FULL -
sm riso I READY FOR DEVELOPMENT. , nn.,...- OA v«.riuT
HEAVY SHAKE ROOF. MLS I LOW DO\W« PAYMENT
>11334. STTROOl
[Well located contemporary Fyitd
I bldg, on a Ig. corner lot. 2 BRi
eacn slot, flreptacat end a devel-l • --- • - —
oped basement. EXCELLENT FI-{Langford area, A-1 condition, low
NANCING AVAILABLE. MLS. > maintenance, large let.
Call now. GLENN NICHOLLS at, Asking: S1S7J)00.
S9d-748y or 592-2431 Lansdowne or the equity in your house, Du-
Properties. plex or large block. Call Hans
Heqen of H. Heoen Raaity Ltd. >
348^U Res; 477-3227. ML S 18274. ‘
$350.00 RF:^^ J32.900
we have luat listed meM two eider
UbbwIima* e-ie am
I 3I4-3C)4 or 345-4771 (ANYTIME)
I VIEW ROYAL
285 Helmcken Road
'A FINE FAMILY
IQUIET RESIDENT
lEe]rw.«4 wii'E
MAL DINING, LAR__ _
IK.TCHEN, 4-PCE. BATH. FULL
BASEMENT. LARGE REC ROOM.
12-CAR GARAGE. BEAUTIFUL
'LARGE LOT WITH SHRUBS AND
"WORTH A LOOK"
Rxkl 4 nd aoartment conversion
(14 units) Showing $20,230. Gross,- - , «« iw»» !.•<•« -"v v.*,-.
Income could be tllered to allow Uypifxea m Nanaimo. 02,900 each
for prestige family residence end,, - ' -.- 4 .-
still ^rent out 2 F^r_ more,^ O**
FOR * COMPLETE
CALL
Boy
OETAILS.
detail please call J.JH.
342-9)91 or 479-4594 N9^.
Possible Duplex! BILL CARNEGIE
nils 4 vr old, 4 BR home ahould,^^^*' 24-hfa. 453-3427 Rea.
tasy to convert. 3 .baths., 2
LT. INDUSTRIAL
LOT ,____
Excalient location in city. Ideal for TREES. MLS
retail, wholesale and warehouse.'
Heavy traffic. List price 4110X00.
MLS.
ESQUIMALT
INDUSTRIAL
PROPERTY
$6.75 P.S.F.
fireplaces, duplex zoned. Priced
to sell at 449,900. Drive bv 1220
Walnut St. Call TED PINFOLD
384-7742 or 342-9191.
D. F. HANLEY AGENCIES LTD.
wifh' ratals of $175.00 per side
(tenants pay own utllltle*. Also 4 »
duplexes with rentals of about 10,300 sq. ft. lot plua excellent
1540.00 eacn priced et $59,900 hooje, ideal ter office and atorMa,
apiece or try your oHeron the lot. or live in and operate your buaP
ROB OANIELSEN Ineu. Asking $49,500 and raason-
S95.5171 595-4442,4^11 Offers considered. MLS 17403.
CANADA TRUST CALL I
KEN MANN
SW.5144
■lAL
DON'T JUDGE!
this conversion by its cover. The
outside is ulehl But this grand*
name consists of 3 deilghtfui suites
and 3 Leautiful housekeeping
rooms. AND a gross income of
lover n Thousand dollars per veer.
It'S ideally situated on^oss St>
:il ROOM ROOMING
good condition and
shows over S9XpO
Cmayfair realty)
Reel good eervko station business,
with boat repair and sales, also
the servlet station has 2 good
hoiFs, 3 pumps, and marine
eump. scope over h ied greasing ^,7 rvuMiM strMt
equipment. Buildings ere In reel,’*'^' SSVflR IlftBoirM centre'
good shape. Thie business can be, "WYta'h mopping cemre
purchased separate from buildings I
if preferred. {
17 SUITES
near the ocean. Only 499.900. Call
GERRY MARTIN
Bus 594-5144 Res 477-7050
T. L. Mann 4 Associates Ltd.
NEWLY LISTED ‘ ‘
REVENUE DUPLEX
Excellent slde-^-sidc duplex. Es-
. quimelt area, 2 bedrooms each
>»ide, hat gross revenue of 44940,
iwmich could be raised to 47480 in
December. Newly listed at $75,000
MLS.
DALE YOUNG
: 477-0191 pager 174 477-7344
.,occ •ILI- KAPTEYN
344-2955 Z77-019I 442-1242
--lYAL TRUST
6ST/-
net
HOUSE,
lecation, I
vaariy.,
PRICED TO SELL AT $59,900.
REC SCHUMAKER 594-2333
CEC PEARCE 3t4-3404
345-8771 (ANYTIME)
GORGE CUTIE
JUST LISTED
Owner Moving Out
of Town
LOCATED IN THE GORGE AREA
CLOSE TO SHOPPING. THIS
HOME CONSISTS OF LRM.
WtTH FiRbPLACE. 2 BED¬
ROOMS. WW IN ONE AND OAK
Floors in the other, kitch¬
en ANO DINING AREA:
t-KiDGE AND ALMOST NEW
RANGE INCLUDED IN PRICE.
UTiLtlY ROOM, PLUMBED AND
WIRED FOR WASHER AND
Wfvs, asking $49,900. ^7-^._ 1 DEVELOPERS!*
BY OWNER Brentwtwd Bay, apprx 100X00 sq OKYER: ADDITIONAL
35 view suites In Victoria, seven ,,;,onr« tK feSTR.M I lened USED AS AN OFFICE. NICE
ALMOST £e* ’W0*RK°
3MU27, RO.,ll,J.C«,n MB IOW, SHOP. ^^IM^CULATE ^CONDF
financing. 3U-4I01.
APT. BLOCK. 4_ UnVtS,
p'lnLt Jack'Swanston' 592-43M; Jjpi^ wrrvw -..-.ip-.r.
cellent condition, 477.9140 , 385-2070. , , ^ WHITTOME and CO. LTD. FOR APPT'S TO VIEW
?45 RE\’i:NrE
PROPERTIES WANTED
PRIVATE PARTY ' WISHES TO
purchase apartment block In Vk-
torle area, SO-sultes or rrore.
Reply Victoria Press. Box 107.
247
lO>LMEROlAl, OR
INDl'STRIAL
PBOPEBT1ER
W’AREHOUSE
12,800 square feet of wharahouse
zoned land on Dupplln Rosd. Plans
«nth Engineer's stamp Included In
the eskinq price of S12l.^. For
further information call ELL-
WOOD NAULT 385-5741 or 344-4190
., Nenaimo Realty (Victoria) Ltd.
I FOR ’ QUICir^ALi.^REOUC'BO
I to 17X0 sq. ft. Evaluated as com-
imerclat or apartment or con-
(dominium zone. Evening calls
'471-4153. No agents.
CALL
DOUG LAWSON
REG SCHUAAAKER
; BLUES?
i Trouble getting started? Finances
' a fizzle) Mortgages soem imooesl-
bit] Cell me this wWkand and let
me tell vou what you can afford,
and how to get there.
DOUG POSKITT
S9S4171 477-0445
man ON A BOCK
L\ VIC-WEST
With magnificent views and has
great potsntlsl for rtvenue. Pre¬
sently vacant and could be duplex.
Zoned for duplex. Bathrooms on
both floors and views from all
sides. This could bo a groat strata
(or someont in the market for a
home with revenue. Asking price
of $52,500. Please call:
LESLIE BOHER
594- 1445 595-5171
TERRY SMOLLETT
454-5412 595-5171
344-4275 (PAGER 729)
GOLFI.VG \\TDO\VS?
Why not wave to your husband as
he drives bv this beautiful prestige
home opposite Uplands Golf
Course. Spacious living room and
dining room with rock fireplace.
Three bedrooms, fantastic recrea¬
tion room with FP and Hawaiian
bar. All appiianew Included. Over
'-a acre of beoutiful landscaping
wHh iprinklor svstom and private
brick peflo. For an appointment to
view this exclusive fisting, please
confect: $130X00
GODFREY WALLS
595- 5)71 4S4-a91
FINISH YOURSELF
And save money on this brand
new 3-oedroom home In popular
Gordon Head. Only reoulree finish¬
ing touches or the builder will
finish for you. Phone now for an
appointment to view:
JEAN McMICHAEL
595-5171 477-9)13
Gorge
BRAND NEW!!:
OVER 1405 SQ. FT. , ,
3684 SAN JUAN *220 Vvolnut
Lovely residence, featuring 3 bed- 9 BRs (3 and rec. room
rooms, two 4-pce. bathrooms, large bath in biml. tor tn# big
living room with flroolace with ad- t f*friiiv or In-law surte. $49,900
loinlng 11 x 10 dining room and I
sunny patio off family-size kitchen- , 1 4^*3 pAmkr-rvLa
with breakfast area. Ouelilv w-w 1 ’ I OOO remorOKe
carpet throughout — full base-13 BRs. 3 pee. both up. LR, sepa
ment. .rate DR, kitchen, nook end 3 pee.
Lovely residence, featuring 3 bed - bath main, bsmt. $49,900. MLS
rooms, two 4-pce. bathrooms, large |
living room with fireplace with ad- D.,-..,
joining 11x10 dining room and! ^000 .V^OODOrO DOy
sunny patio oH -- fimllv-tlie Big lot (109* frontao#), old houie.
kitchon with breakfast area. (Mail- 2 fair size, 2 smeM BRs. 3 pce
ly W-W carpet throughout lulhbatn. youth's rec room in partial
bastmant. - bsmt. $74,900.
JOHNNY HAYDN
further information on tee
5M-S)71 OTCK JAMES 592-2139. above 3 ads. ^ease call JOHN
I RUSSEL nights 593-3240 or
ONEOFAIOND 1477-0141.
and situated on the beautiful Col-;
wood Golf Course. This unusuatj
home has boon built around an « u dak. ... - .
outstandlofl circular rock fireplace.
Wtth lls 5 bedrooms, roc. room, 3 BF, full bsmt, bunga-
family room, pool room, den end
targe bathrooms. M has unlimited Call DDBSON
potential. A MUST TO SEE Inside. ' 47?-014) or res. 594-4345.
Reduced to $49,000. To view, , , ,,
JEAN AAcMicHAEL j Hillcrcst, UVic
595-5)71 477-91)3<N9vv decorated and vacant, ready
< to get settled in for University, 2' ^
FAIRFIELD DUPLEX ' 3 <>". a^ftown, tem-
»aa AArt I 'ly/00^' locallon backirw onto
$89,000 undeveloped erea. MLS $83,500
You can live lik# royalty and still wlO- CRAY LAlTE
tUlp the mortgage payments. This HASLAM 477-1994
home retelns the alegence of one!382-9191.
of fha great old timers. 3 bed -1 ^
”‘*"'1 Clase In — 3 BR
JEAN AncMICHAEL With a little Imaginetion this solid
477-9)13 stucco bungalow can be tumid in
to lovely home, has new windows.
3 vr. old roof, copper plumbing,
modern wiring, attic all oevelopad
ML in.SW. Excellent financing
kW- loanable. IRENE VAN 342-9191 or
tl^i^4.e)si. JO-ANNE YELLOWLEES
452-3555
Langford
$42,500. close to ell shoos snd bus.
This czxnpsct 2 BR all electric
homo is ideat for the retired. Easy
care lot. Tenant occupied to ao-'
polntments to view must be arr
anoed. Phone AAARY WOOD
312-9191 or 592-2447. MLI9149.
595-5171
AND IN-LAW sum:
could help with mortgegc pay¬
ments on this clean and tidy 3-bed¬
room, full-basement home In tho,
Blenkinsop end Cedar Hill Cross
Roads area. On a quiet cut de sac.
with a large, private treed back¬
yard. Owner haa bought. All rea¬
sonable offers presented to the list
price of $59,900.
ROBERT OANIELSEN
595-5171 595-4442
GORDON HEAD
TALL OAKS
IN WILLOWS
2732 Thompson Ave. | spectacular
SWKEPING
Distent esa glimpses from this. /Nzr t
NEW EXECUTIVE 3-b#droom 1 UtterS!
family home, shake roof, full basc-i • • . • ,
ment, 2 sundecks. Undergrwjnd | hetlS HeiOhtS
Srg, (am.lv
basement. 1350 iq. ft. on ma%
'including scp. iOxIO.5 dining room.
Gleeminf '•—
White
BEACON inU.
PARK DUPLEX
Side by side excootionaily
well
REAL ESTATE DEPT
WouM vou like to hav* • two bed- 1 Terrific location near iunetton of 21 SUITES
r«w l^aa aJxl births te Bay Ave. and Fort St. - 14,Modern epertment block, only 9
aSithv TH? huaiiSw i7 a BfaSSX, l-BR and 3 2.BR. Electric heat, el- years old. Convenient location,
ar^ c<»if*etfaMrv^lch*cauMte 9vator, cioit to buMS and storoa. I aiono with large low interest fi-
m rmuphWaai. JLrV BuIlt 1941. Over $40X00 oross - nenclng and tne asking price of
«« CejMB i.IT^iwk *Fera. approx. $145X00. 41.244 only $343X00 makes this rtlefiveiy
non. S49XW plus stock. I monthly Princ. end Inf., due | maintenance tree epartment block,
TKu !«•> ***3. Rootod to odultt. Full ptIco on excelltnl investmont. For mora
$725,000. Please call TED GRAVES Information cell:
*- . . SUBHASH SHARMA
; 477-1841 479-4933
1 BLDCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
I ZONED M-2 1 592-034$
Large older house. Could bo reno¬
vated to duplex. Revenue ahouW
be ^5 0 per month. 574 David St.
.dd •11 Vr. Wi? con. Mi'jMs'oJIS.Vljr MLs'N';''riM
talnod. Llv» in on, nil,, and lal “ 315-»3I. MLS No. IS74!
the rents take cere of most of ————
vour monthly paymonts. This can
be purcneied * ' '
I by a low down pav-
ter e building lot.
.. Try t3,000 down.
PHONE ROSS ROOT 24S-2Y?4
J. H. Whittome and Co. Ltd
Box 130 Chemalnus B.C.
244-3231
Capital Cost
Allowance
28 Suites
0 1ROWN
on
"Peepio Helping People"
SOUND SCENE!!
SPECIALTY BUSINESS DEALING
IN SOUND EQUIPMENT. TAPE-
DECKS, STEREO, RECORDING
FRANCHISE, AND ELATED SER¬
VICES. ALREADY PROFITABLE
UNDER ABSENTEE MANAGE-
. . . . ^ ^ ^ •wi'va tuieiiT svii-wu'xsiimv. evay*
Original A.R.P. with C.M.H.C. re- care landscaped lot. Total bulldlno I leased,
ducTna lubaldY ***'*■ we<l «»• w »«» ycur'4,600
Completed Te4f .•.'kl own rents. New, Excosive Listing i Posses
NOW IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY
TO MOVE RIGHT INTO THIS
COMFuRTABLE 3-BEOROOM
HOME IN A MOST ^UGHT
AFTER AREA OF OAK BAY. FOR
A PRIOR VIEWING CALL NOW.
MLS. M2,5Q4.
YOUR HOST IS JIM McNAUGHT
or 345-477) (enytimo)
SEA VIEWS OF
CORDOVA BAV
CORDOVA BAY
CALLING
$52,000
2BEDR<36m BUNGALOW
. . JGGLED IN AMONGST AI
LARGE. .T|EED ^LOT .OF. ^P-1 MT. DOIKJLAS
home offers
swimming pool wnh
__ __ large swirpoot
room wtth Mpdrate heetlng and
filtering system, iKoe beamed
celling living room wtth firoploco,
family room with fireplaco, larae
rec. room, 3 bodroomi. 2 baths. To
view, please call:
W. K. (BILL) CLARK
454-54n 5954)71 454-5339
NOW AVAILABLE.
APARTMENTS
TRIPLEX
All on separate meters and se-^ , -uvu
parate H.w. tanks, 3-bedroom -14 Sutles, $535X00
<naln suit# features LR with tire-'» Suites, 4950,000
placed seperate formal DR and 34 Suites, 4I>1%(!^
part basement. Two l-bedroom WAREHOUSES
suites totally self-contained. Easv-i24,200 sq. ft. Tvee Road. Fully
- -- .-a -- .$350,000.
... _ sq. ft. Mayfair. Vacant,
.ow^n rents. New, Yxcusive Listing) Possession possible, $175,000.
uniquely located at Crotton. Mix- and priced at $75,900. ‘ For further Information:
ture of 22 on# bedroom end 4 two- 345-7^1 Kent Macieod 595-4373 304-3124 J. COLWELL
bedroom suites, oil fired hot watt'' GARDNER REALTY LTD. 344-3124 R. 0. LAW 474-9474
heating, elevator, controlled an- ' ' --- T .
trance and other normally accept- DlJtNJCAN
ed amenities. Offered at $22X00.00 MAINTENANCE?
with .X.tln, hr., .Mt<Oh,.in«l 7.S .cr«, _ s» «. « hlahwav
n . r • suites. Ne^v foundation, roof, wir- — "
or6nt Lj. CWIDQ I'fO- Plumbino all within last 3 yrt.
dtfuAo. Newly refwvated and landscaped.
38a-4424 (Res. 4S1-5441) location. Front suite
'S3x). back $310. Priced to sen at
$54,900.
ua>7/2) I^AAaclaod 595-4273
GARDNER REALTY LTD.
BAYSHORE REALTY LTD.
101)4 FORT STREET
FAIRFIELD DUPLEX I.NVESTSIENT PROPERTY
__ $89,500 5 LARGE SUITES Vic wast. Ex-
Qi>ERATQR. ASKING PRICE DF Grano homo In txcallth, canaillon JI'/SPl.
ONLY >ton.t,l«l lo 00 ana pawn aualax.
taSOOO baarooms upoar and 3 bodroomi I ?.H«.®Toiilng tISAIOO. Asking
MAKES THISONE OF TODAY'S lowtr - ova, 1150 M. R. on aaenliJififfl?'
SETTER BUSINESS OPPORTU- tWof. Main floor hoi bollroom-llio BflTO ,**YHE BU^ER;
NITIES. OETAILS IN CON- living room. flropUcO. window > fiVunc?*'.
FIDENCE TO OUALIFIEO PRIN- lOots. boomod collloa. I•a<lad OIOII i*,?FHvlOS LIMITED. 3«2.I3S1 in-
ciPALS ONLY 'Windows, huge master bedroom
JIM McNAUGHT 593-0245 with built-in desk, cupboard rnd‘
ALAN u. POTTER 596-1464 drawors. very workable kitchen;
. dinette, dining reom end two more 1
bedrooms, secluded sundeck and I
laundry room. Upoer level hes blq'
living room, fireplace, built-in cup-
boerds, window seal, dining room,
.. . kitchen end 4 bdrm.
This business Is located on a busy > trance. This home
highway cor^n^ In e growing com- prestige borne — could easily'be
VIEW THE SEA
AND MOUNTAINS
FROM THIS
ESQUIMALT
EXCLUSIVE
irbty c
intalne
THIS_
1$ SNUGGLED IN AMONGST
LARGE TREED LOT OF J
PROXIAAATELY .40 OF AN ACRE ,
ON THE RIDGE. OPPORTUNITY Offered for th# first time, m.s 3-
KNOCKS. CALL NOW FOR OE- V»9J^ ^ST'* *1:
TAIU. MLS 11535. t'9'*9d a conyenlwtly dIf-
YOUR HOST IS JIM McNAUGHT 34)Odropm layout. ^In
592-0245 or 3*5-177) (anytime)'»*» ••vl^
- - - ’ . I room wtth brick fireplace.comple-
> tely separate dining room, 2
I oathrooms and a family cabinet
; kitchen. Downstairs Is a formal
' entrance loyer, den and R.l. rec
room and tho 74x123 foot lot Is
; fully laratcaped. $74,900. MLS
I 11941.
RICK KALLSTROM
OPEN HOUSE
SAT. SUN. 2-4 P.M
BY BUILDER
2970 Rockhill PI.
$60,600
maintalnod ond easy to kaep
mat wey. Lott of character in this
property vrlth beamed celMnqs: 3
bedrooms and study on ona tide-
One bedroom on other side close
to shops. Three fireplaces enhance
rt-e total pKkage. Reduced asking
price Is $71,000. Act quickly on
this, If vifon't LASTIti MLS 17777.
For information regarding this
property, pleue ealt:
KAREN BOHER . WIN DOUGLAS
590-164S 595-517) 34^9902
LIVK NEAR TREE.S
INSTEAD OF PEOPl.E First Time On
A lovolv n^step home set among « < • ^
tho trees In the prestigeouji /VlQrket
^reenae^od area. The large lot pAfii-inQ v*ncters Affwr th*iF i 30 P
(1.7 acre) and th# beeutHui park-
Ilf .
DlrM oak doors throughout
Brick flr^ace In llvino
room. 12x20 sundeck ovar carpot.
Huge fencad backyard, walk to
store and school. To view call RAT
DOERKSEN 342-919) or 474-3432.
Picturesque Setting
A quaint brown and green 1'/
story English cottage. Situated on
a park like .4 acre. Brick fireplace
adds cozyness to living room, s«p
dining room convenient to the
kitchen. You must tee this new
llstlrto so call us now.«EXC. JO
ANNE YELLOWLEES 4S2-355i or
IRENE VAN 3S2-9I91 or 344-9191
like tatting make this home an
oaali of privwcv. This Is on ideal
executive homo virlth 2 large bed¬
rooms, a dan, 7% baths, a massive
living room, family room, and a
SEPARATE dlnlrtg room. This
home Is excellent for entertaining
as It hts e very large 2 cer
garage and circular driveway with
plenty of parking for guests.
Priced at $145,000. To view, please
phone:
KAREN HOBER WIN DOUGLAS
594-1445 595-517) 343-9902
ft., full besament stbrv and halt on
duplex zoned lot conveniently is-
caled within I mile circle. Featur
Ing bright spacious LR with fire
place, large DR. 2 BR end family
sized kiichen on main. Addtlonai
develooment potentfai on 2nd doo'-
Offered at appraised value $53,500
View bv calling HERB AAcOAN
NOLD 595-1177 or GLEN McOAN
NOLD SK-6*U or office 382-9)91
New ML
Gordon Head
FAIRl-TOLD
BORDER
1650 sq.. ft. of ch^acler
’age plus over 350 ft. on Nor- iThie superbly constructed homo has
cross Road. Suhable for small dev-;bean maintained In an Immaculate
e'opment under oomprahensive condition and offers privacy with
zoning. $ultab> for Retail-|e glorious view. 2 large bedrooms
Wholesale outlot, car dealership, on the main door with another
motel site. | finished room In the high grouM
_ I'aval beiament. Garage and other
At QO separate off street perking provid-
ed. Price: $79,900.
DES DESJARDINS
Oft'ce Building Downtown Duncan ; 479-7141 Off. Res. 3154925
currently 2400 sq. ft. -leased at -
sq’.'^t.'^^ HIGH QUADRA
L.\NGFORD DUPLEX
Follow open house signs across
from (Soidstream Shell. Just com¬
pleted deluxe 3-bdrm houM 1240
sq. ft. Features stucco ext. eluml-
num siding, doublo wide carport,
new used brick arches saoaraflng
LR from OR. Deluxe kitchen cabi¬
nets with provisienss for dishwesh -1
or. AAaster ensulte bath. QualHy w- STATUS FLYING
fo-w ivoughoot. Full besament
planned for a Mure development i Cozy 4 or 5-bedroom homo In Oak
with large finished rec. room, i Bay north, ctosa to the University.
Finished firepiKe with w-to-w. Be I well manicured lawns, aasy<are
aura to seo this before vou buy. To backyard with large tundecli, fern
view, call 479-1441. ’ ■ -
home, drIve-in garaqe. fir*
place, family room, full price
$40,900.
Okie T1AY I- * level split, 4 BR. 2 bein*.
t>Ai fireplace, large lot, r*
duced to 449,900.
_ _ _ 2. _3 BR /ancher, immacui.a'*
595-5171 (inyilme) 344-0751 floo>s.''beiigner kitchen,' 2 'bed-;
‘rooms, PLUS den or 3rd bedroom,
Vh bathrooms, full besoment. I
I large landscaped yard Miy carpel -1
3 bedrooms, aioctric haet, aaavlod and the old world charm hesi iT'r^luL/rw^
care lot—trult trees, close to all;been oreserved through the recent: V-UIWLTUU
schools and shopping, nice family updating. View by appointment. 3. 2 BR, garage, lot avereqe
home made for eesv living. To- $59,500. NEW MLS. I 80x180 treed, run price $49,900.
view, cell: MLS 19003 RICK KALLSTROM 14. 3 BR. full basemtn, rec. room,
W. H. (BILLLCLARK 595517) 3M-0751 lot 80x200, fruit trees, a com
458-5339 595-5171 *58-5877
THE ZTECa.ERS
OFFERS
592-1748 or 595SI71
344-4075 (Pager 310
ily size kitchen with eating aree ■ PERB SEAFRONT
'nd fridge and stove included — Over an acre of grounds sloping to
ivlng room end family room with 204 ft. of frontage on Haro Strait.
Exceptional views from this con-
piete mini farm. Full prica
459,900.
5. Your choice of 5 brand naw
homes, 3 BR. )'.q behs. full
basemtns, from $49,400 t»
$51,900. S yr. warranty. Down-
payments could be as low as
$2,500.
y 4. Exec, home at a_ working
Terms available.
firet_
. MLS 19)14.
W. H. (BILL) CLARK
454-5339 5955171 654-5477
Oj^3«-877J ^anytime)
COUNTRY
GROCERY
.... _ , - >ing com¬
munity# with tho turnover showing
an annuel Increase. Ideal for a home. MLS IWS. For fufthir 'de-!
family venture at there Is $ 4-bed- tails plea«e call’
room aMrtment attached to the JEAN McMICHAEL
afore. This Is leased property and 595-517) 477-9113
requlTM only $a^ to purchase THE CANADA TRUST COMPANY
the itock and fixtures and good¬
will. For details contact WALT
HEARN at 74*-*1l4 ovas. 743-2479.
Astro Reolty Ltd. 127 Ingram St,
Rm. 24, Duncan. B.C.
13.3 PER CENT
RETURN
$79,900
i"bdTmL’ E!""*"' ''“W" PFOpwtv. Prim,
nom* was anq I5,a',rt_^ eww wtrum i c
GARDNER REALTY LTD
$48,900
Strata Title Duplex
i:hui)chw(»d pl.
__ oe work-1 (Nearing Completion)
$225,000.;privacy and grounds to t^e .Hiving room, stone fireolace, seoe-. UNIQIT: CONDOMINIUM
i relop. MLS 1*093. Priced at dming room, targe kitchen, waiic TO TOWN and I'' iTte Uplands. A home for e tern-
!$69.y00. Pieese cell: .with nook. 2 bedrwrns w. ivwiv ana , ^ ^ together, vet privete. 5
HORACE KEMPSTER '-‘-piece bathrooms. Full basement; PARKS " -■- * *“ •'
479-7WI Res. 479-7794 •ySJ^bliy'VS'^ieS ’ Swnlah arches leed through front
TO v.ew,j,(j^^ kitchen of this immacu¬
late one-bodroom condominium.
Has been decorated end new fix-
temporary 4 room, 3 full bath j
home. Private formal gardens, cir¬
cular drive. $115,000. MLS 14919.1
Cell the Zieglers
SPACTOUS
5H-2404 ,
AMBLEWOOD DR.
ROYAL OAK AREA
!zoned MLS. GLENN NICHOLLS
5M-2431 Lansdowne
Here is a 2300 sq. ft. one level
delightful bungalow, close to the
city but In a rural atmosphere.
_ 'Three bedrooms with master four ,
Ipl*C9 ensulte. Kitchen 25x13 with;
hmllY area. Savaral axtraa wflkfl!
m ioce-i.,.-..i.d 1 .,. ..ia..._w personally.
GOVT ST.
BUSINESS
NEW LISTING
117 MEDANA
JAMES BAY
$56,500
This property haa 3 self-^on-
FAIRFIELD
4 SUITES
1 — 3 bdr,. 1— 2 bdr., 2 — 1 bdr.. iceilent ipa'iim^t I'dail for extcu-l^t tiai 'em*
kept In^maculate conditon. Hotifivo offices. Approx. 10,000 sq. ft.,
W^er lifct. Asking $135,000. For a pfimo Investment al $195,000.
further Infornrtatlon on this fino TED WALFORO
- ■ ■ Bsrton'4n-I44l 598-1420
^LOCK BROS. RE^TY LTO;_
wholesale'
WAREHOUSE
ZONED
property conteci John
3857545 ( 34 hrs.) Island Homes
Ltd. _
28 SUITES
DOWNTOWN
OFFICE &
WAREHOUSE
exceptional moltl-PL. --T»miiv mrtm Mwarai anraa
I'iTwai ssiS.a'ramSi'j'iS*:;: •ii's"^i’sjXRDi;r’-
..... - Strata Title Duplex
THE PRICE IS
RIGHT
LET'S MAKE A
DEAL
. _ . - . _. . ....’king
men's price. 5 or 4 BR, 3 (uH
baths, 2 fireplaces, rac. room,
double gerege and workshop,
treed lot, 1,454 sq. ft. main
floor. Full price $»,900.
7. 3 BR, could be 4, only 9 yrs.
old. large lot. luH price $49,900.
4. 6 BRTs baths, 2 flra^acas.
large level lot, • many many
extras. Full price $47,900.
bedrooms, a 9x14 kitchen for an '
easy breakfast. Entertain in the .
15x20 living room or dine In the:'
teparate 12x14 dining room. Relax
In the 12x14 den or by the fire In [ .
the huge rec room wired for ''
stereo. Plumbed lab or darkroom.'
Seclusion In the rear end access,
Irons 2 streots front end back.i
$104,000. - - - - •-
Zieglers
City
part basement.
owner anxious, open to offers.
2 or 3 bedrooms, plus 1 bed¬
room in-law suite, full base¬
ment, Full price $$4,900. Nev/
ML
tures will stay as well as stove
end fridge. AAodern. well construct¬
ed building with underground ^ nm.
parking, rec room end hobby room ^^ons 2 strMts frwt 2 Br up i down corner lot
^ qui^^rJj,fulWc;W9.90o'^
pay Zieglers | j
ROBERTA HOBSON •iqnrtyi cosmetics only, 3 BR. Ml base
594-1194, M30,000 ment, under $40,000.
I A lovely turn ot the centurv home'
on ’i acre with extensive views oti
Cadboro Bay. Tastefully restored; I jOOKc
modernization has not marred Its I). Executive home, almost
charm. Presantly occupied ■ * -- - •
suites and easily re-converted
sq. ft. Call the Zl^iers.
, RlIY SETTU:
Ipiex I-XIRLESS??
Brand new, seperetely titled sidel*. m «<jma rtAa.n
uv side. In a quiet Ixatlon. Attrac-, ft oJ?^mSS*h
five ppen firepleces in living 4tTKl i
iKflII, roama. Tv« HOroora ’S'„r''|„”SS.™oT'vk
™ w ‘•r’MakoSia"’ SJlolir I '•"raS*Qfl cal^*,
iWAflo ’ •'^®*®‘®®"^ sac and haa a largo private gar.
SSS-Wi PETER AAASON 4774314! aJlc Tew"®
ORDortunlty for an anterprising
person or coupit who want to be
their own boss. Complete details
avallabi*. and confidential show-
, at your convonlence. $59ZMX).
592-3971
lAuicu uwucuruum suites, years old. Large mortgage can bei
Area U rewmei R.o Thintov kasumed. Owner would consider!
Area is zon«a iJupi^X. farnny ^ oavment.'
This
ings i
Gardner Reetty Ltd.
QUALICUM BEACH
Outstanding restaurant opportunity
at boaulllul Quantum Beach. Fully
hcansed, 100 saat operation In ax- .
cellant location. Halt-acre lot _ , SUITE*
lesves room for future «xr>an8lon. y*"??* «
Priced et 4165,000 to include lard, Asking Price 4775,000
h. MdIngs and equipment, all in ex-
ceitent condition. For further Inter- . . <2 SUITES
m-itlon ceil Bird Johnson at Y^??*
?a-?214 or 7414274. or write: *•--
PEARSON, JOHNSTONE
* ASSOCIATES LTD.
P. 0. Box 390
P^rksvilla, B.C.
^ .tAJiiw JY - family ^^a as part iwyment.so ft of C$-* zoned orop. ’*o<ki oxterlor flnishecl In a warml
Owner moving to Penticton. Asking For more Interma- l^” ffiiM! avocaro groan. Located In the pop-
CMaccommodetlon. Three houses oniu'k'’ Brentwood area, this new
fiAonuPo pPAiTv iTn'*"^;pfopertv. Rental revenu# 412,720 2 ^r?®T*',^’V»
GARD ^j^ REALTY LTD, annum. Property adioine pre- *-•**•'eiertrlc
ipoM Bianshard Street extension. |* i®h*f*' suf’^k' w-W carpotlng,
I Priced at $154,9(XI 'electric forced air heating, ground
UD-down each 1140 so. »t.( 7 bdrm. '3457721 KENT MtcLEOD 5954273 '•vel tetrad, entrance, PIM • high
rents. GARDNER REALTY LTD. oasament with laundry faclUllas,
roughed-ln plumbing, vac. system
end 2nd fireolace. All *-'
and other details pheme:
FRANK BEAMISH REAl^l DUPLEX
TY. n85oll3 anytime.
APARMENTS
FOR SAlaE
newly renovated. Good
against asking 445,000.00.
THE ZIEGLETLS
595-5171 592-1748
344-4075 (PGR 310)
CANADA TRUST
LIMITED LIGHT
INDUSTRIAL
- Sq. Ft. of M-1 Zoned Lend
4114,000 100 ft. Off Douglas St. in tha
' OLDER Dn*LEX S49..h00 downtown aroa. Has 3 Old bldgs
Revanue producing plus owner's
*93 not) 2-bedroom suite on mein floor.; ^
Askrna Price $699^7 ' ' V® ®.? '®’i 38S'-0t58
, FOR MORE DETAILS CALL; ‘ S'.. '"'rH?'. R'TMET AGEN(?||
Ken H right 3S8.21S.'; aaeryle HAYs*'^-aooi or Res. . 3«-4MT
Rick Klnnis t77-9:ffl4 1'“ Ro«i ii-w Co. !OF.FiCE_ButLD(NG site,
- - 2nd fireplace. All this for only
443,900. ML 14028. To view call:
STAN JAMFS
595-2941 BUS RES. 592-3740
Fairfield Revenue
ONLY $65,900
Large older duplex with addit. tc-
contodatlon in full high batmt. Big
main floor suite. 3 bedrooms and
sep. dining room. Two bdrm self-
contained suite up. Early vacant
possession can be arranged.
- -MASON
I ROBERTA HOBSON
15455171 594-1194
CEDAR HILL GOLF
CULDESAC
siae.oot
3457771 PETER I
477-9314
terfront, uh^tructed water
views. Over 3J)00 finished so
ft. 4 BR, billiard room, rec
room, sep. office superior con
structlon and finishing. Full
price $99,900.
FRESH AIR I
Bordering Ooldstream Park. Quiet
complete tnformation on
KSh r.N' 'esse call R
tK? ^ ” l3l^- RHODES 479-9241 or JOT
th# Ziegiors. IWME 502-2130 or office 342-9191.
PRESTIGE
WAYNE BUTTERFIELD
( LIMITED
MODERN LIVING
WITH RUSTIC
TOUCH
OPEN HOUSE
SAT., SUN.
1:30-4:30
Other days, Pleaxe Call:
2955. 2%t> Ro^khUl Place
Home In 10 Mile Point. Seaurity
assured with vour doo patrolling
•the totally wotitd grounds. 9 years
.old, 4 bedreoms, 3 full bathv rec
__enhance the'^oom. family room, den. $175,000.
latxHcaoIng of this AW sq. ft., Call th# Zieglers. *
1974 Tudor tucked awey on a quiet { THE ZIEGLERS )
cxjl-de-eac racing the Cedar Hill *e2.i76a 3B4-4079 (Pgr 3I0)
Golf Course. 4 bedrooms, 22x18 ■***^""’
L.R., 13x10.6 D.R., family room.!'**^^ ”
den, rec. room end 3 bathrooms
PLUS 4room and bathroom "in-; BY OWNER
law suite." I Brentwood, 3 bedroom home.,
—4 zone hot weter baseboard heat-.master bedroom ensulte. Sundeck;
'"8-^ .A.A., AW .......AAA..double ceroort under. Ground
—5 bMutIful BAY WINDOWS floor enfrence, full basement
-built-in vacuum system, Jenn-air reedy for development, large Hv-
stove. Westlnghoj^ oven and ing room has lovely stone fire-
other eopllanc85j^S 14950. (Place. Separate dining room, spa-
JIM BOTTO!\ILEy ! clous kitchen and nook with built-
US-SI7I RES sea-aaiit It* dishwasher. Wall to wall carpet-
- -, la... I AM& l,a« aIma 4m A.-h^lA Ana)
$100,000
Aoproximafe annual gross tor Rest
Home. Succassfui business with
(‘tl-tima management and staff.;
Can be. operated m TRIPLE REVENUE
WMtinont Realty'
920 Hilltiide
.T864796
Ing businesa or a tax deduction sit
uetlon. Suit protqMlonel, retired or
even young person. Poasiblo lucro-
tlvo sideline Included. Asking price
double the gross with excaHant
mertgaoas avallabta; trade could
he downoayment or e""ttv.
477-2739 after 5:00 P.m. for Inter-
‘ 5BEDR00M DUPLEXES FOR CORNER ""■ZDNFO
sale with full basements, fire -'coumercial
pieces end beiconies situated on'
.the corner of Judah and Bre.-ner-
ton, priced 4t 447,400 and financing
’'availabla, strata title. Phone
345-1491.
OFFICE BUILDING SITE, DOWN- property located in Ihe Claremont _ ,»S-5I/1 RES. 5944333 ij!* JtZu 4 « .^hLAi.V^ai
TOWN CORE.^ BUSY c6lWOO[) •!’••• COnsifH Of 2 levels Gold>U'Pam Park area. Rp- S95517t spencer LEE '2^
GENERAL 'jji a.M™,,.^«, ^uced lor quick aaJe. G. «ul
yss.' 'S?," ,.'»Y ’■(Tc;. K; ■ ?• c<^i™ction CD. Ltd., WATERrao.NT
both, kitchen, ei^ance and three 4(S-77a3.
An Islantd Retreat
340' Lakefront Setting. For
TAXES UNDER S700
YEARLY GROSS $6780
MESA, ARIZONA. EXCEPTIONAL
S9-unlt ooerfment complex with
. , . . •‘■S** mortgege, 7 veer# old. Su-
Older trip ex. always ranted. Con- gerb location. Beautiful condition,
vaniantly ^•tod i^r main street;Pool, many extras. Low down pay
n t^. On# 2 ^room suta. two I mont. Exoellont Invastotent for
1 bedroom sutles -- ell have; profit. Cali new for plctur# and de-
stovM ^ fridges. Thls^ a good,tails. Mr. Robert Barlow. 454-8330.
investment oooortunity. ONers are, ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ' ' . — .
ACRES OF PRIME LAND
*" Scottsdale. Arizona.
m ... -w ^74)191 KNUO SCHWER 478-8203 1 unique oopo^unlty due to Dlann^
vour retirement or the challenge of The Royal Trust Real Estate Dept. Icity zoning uoarade. Attractive
a new venture, a motel-trailer- ___—~ ' *• — terms. Require# substantial Inves-
renosit#. Your Investmeni of oniv f AR ABOVE AVERAGE ! I tor. Call Bob Barlow In victoria,
$165,000 Includas a 2 BR home, 4 mftx.’ i TsrpTVf't |458-43X for details.
ins iited cottages. 15 serviced i LISTING!--
trailer hookups and 12 campsites' Lovely duplex — extremely wail IS'DE-BY-SIDE DUPLEX, 3-BED-
rn 2'} ►c'es. For details, or ao-’keot — large lot '* -- *-* - -*-■ - * '
pointmint to view; ting. 2 garages, . _
MURRAY OR JEANNE LITAS ways, 2 covered sundocks ^ plus I 'offers considered. I3n-I325 HAUL-
3S6-2111 477-1342 carport, ideal cost and Inflation .TAIN ST. jiM RANSON. Wastoata
WONTJ»EAl TRUST CO. fighter. Owners' suite hat alRlty,. 479-5910, ML 11088.
--iTi’lOxlB living room with feature j ■■ ■■ . -
TO ALL OWNERS OF SUPER- fireplace. Would suit older or'NEW SIDE X SIDE DUPLEX,
}^m%tss
\j MHCMTlsV^ ITI.
440-1070 DOUGLAS 382-4151
INVESTORS
Investigate
.9 acre, 230' frontage, poten¬
tial commercial site on a!
bu«yFtr«t.S286.000.rotWng| '?«"!
doMT), 10-\’eer financing. ! Straet-oarklng. Gross rents
59M113. -
halts on the main level plus rec.
room, storage, and 2-pce. bath In,BEAUTIFUL CITY 2-BEOROOM
the basement. Out buildings con-.home, no basement. Ideal for sin-
slst of doublo garage, 2-ft8il barn gia or couple, wall to wall,
and chkkeri coops. Msnv fruit I beamed calling In livir)g reom.
trace, borries, and vegetable par- >39.900 firm 4/7-1711.
den complete this semr-rural ruslk , ^ •-- -. r
pfoperty located lust beyond Royal BUILT tOG HOME 1100
Oak. Outers consWerod to the §«k-lM- ft., suitable tec 3 bedr^. Rp
Ing price of $110,000. MLS 14775 . .••M'Ti'jie yoofseM or will re^as-
For details call: i umplt on vour foundetlon
STAN JAMES ,743-5453.
9952941 Off. Res. 992-3740
BOARDING HOUSE
OWNER — SIDNEY
Near new 3-bedroem, finished
basement, Vj-bath, *‘i*« mort-
gaga, Immediate posseulon.
»S7.>00. 4S4-143S.
In country set-'rooms and 2-bedroom#. Appliances oolxit rnuuBB/-iAt—afiA'aca $40,200. For appointment
I double drivp I Included. All trades end D.P. I to view this or similer proper-
....o. .. . . --- —. Ih 2 mo OFFMita SMaway. ,|„ ^ ooKaatton - call:
4/4-9 541, 9 to 5 weekdays._38.';-3435 .595-0434
$115,000. CCAAMERCfAL BUILD- R^BROWN A WNS LTD.
'HO-. Fort-Quadra araa. Owner.
$44,500
Large elder 4-bedroom house. New
? li furnace. IQO amp service,
oned M-2. 547 David St. 4424114,
442-3321.
992-4470.
FOR SALE
NEARLY COMPLETED 4.BED-
rcom horn# on weli-treod s^.gcr#
In Sooke. Optn to offers. Call aftar
6 p.m. 3t54424.
markats' A^e you'lnt«'es‘ed In a v.un> couple. Asking price Is only : tadrooms. sundecks, $5,000 capital
iTMtora Baka^, all mown ,gulp S7;w. Naw MLS, MaaM Call: eosl allowanca, Colwood araa.:DEVELDPCKS, EUILDEKS, J Older wall codstruclad 5 otJreo.r, DEVELOFtRS
P^eVsSxV:?’ '"veslmant.iP^i^^Wts iolnlng Fort afw View, be ralKSted. Otter.. j^R^heus. on i acre.
S27.900
Located
BY OWNER
Cowichan Bay
GLANFORD SCHOOL AREA
sewer'and'water, this very clein
smaller home he# oil the amenl-
tloa for full time or rocrottional
living. 2 or 3 bedrooms, good
kitchen and bathroom and a living
room and largt sundeck that over-
838 Admirals Rd.
I. Great potential for this R-3
zoned comer, plus lovelv 3 BR
stucco bungalow In excellent
condition. EXC.
816 Dunsmuir
7. Beautiful Tudor legal triplex,
corner Wollaston. Large 3 BR
suite up. Ample parking. Re¬
duced to $49,900 ML17939.
)011 'Burnside West
3. Lovely and beauttfutly kept
family home on large treed lot.
close to all school levels. 7
bathrooms, could be 4 BR or
Inlaw suite. Offers invited lo
the price of $41,900 MLT4297
2355 Keating X Rd
4. Delightful and charming 2 or 3
BR bungalow in a gorgeous
setting of almost 'i acre of
treed and landscaptd lot. Re
duced to $43,900. ML17793
Sidney Townhause
_ use of a privafa
wnvrr. ror personal ahowing, call:
T<5nY BROGAN
3454275 (Pagar 1]71) 995-5171
TCm^NHOUSES
A good saloctlon of aizt, shape and
prices. For Infermatlon or view,
ploaao calls
FENWICK L. THOMPSON
5955^1 594-2347
5 .In lovely Juniper Place. 2 level
townhouse. 7 BR plue wall to
wall throughout, 1*4 baths, pri¬
vate fenced patio or garden
area. ML18443.
coratad and carpatad. 3-badroom
plus largt family room, rocently I
finished. Wall landscaptd and oar-1
dan. Mova right in. Low down-,
payment. Financing arranged.
$49,400. Phona for evening appoint- (For information on the above 9
ment, 479-2150, 479-9486. jads oleasa call IRMA KULIGOW'S-
.. .. ■ ' Kl at 454-5325 or 342-9191.
IHGII QUADRA. $48,900 ;
Older seaclous 2 btdroom home>
with satf-contalned baaamtnt suite. ,
formal dining room, family size I nlS I im6'
kitchen, sundeck, fireplace plus a hark m tha .wfl.pvat ->
aardener'i oaradlse. “a a®” market. 2 ^-
room end den bungalow convenient- .
ly located near Jubilee. Living
room with fireplace, atectric heat-,
ing, 200 amp wiring, fridge, range
and drapes Included. AH this '
Don't Miss
gardener's paradise.
Emil Izik 594-4249
Izik Homes Reatty ~ 3158522
URGENT
LISTINGS REQUIRED
Particularly for non or amail
ment dwellings. Call;
FENWICK L “
SEAVIEW
(^ality 3-5 BR.
Larg# Cordova Lot.
$41.90(r Terms. 47^7571
THOMPSON ,;^Tue .
591.23*7 ON THE LAKE,
'full basamam.
- - - ! 474-4244
—.w price of $45,900. Ml
17930. Details end vlewira with
HERB McDANNOLD 505-1177 or
HERB McDANNOLD 9951177 o>
.office 342-9191.
i Canada Permanent
Trust Company
V
45 Qdllf! Coloniot Vratu>ui, B.C., Sunday, August 22, 1976
ISO HOVSiis FOR SALE t n) HOUSES FOR SALE | IM CABS FOR 8AI.E
_ ]in Packed
$46,500
F. HANLtr AGENCIES LTD.
3»J DOUGLAS STREET
3tS.77il
PRIME
RESIDENTIAL
There is no question that this is
one of HiGH CORDON HEAD'S
finest iocations. Absolutely breath¬
taking seaview and a large treed
lot is the setting for this beautiful
new home superbly craned by one
of Victoria's finest builders. 3,500
linished sq. ft. end the many,
many fine luxurious appointments
and built-in quality features will
provide exceononai spacious and
gracious living for you and your
family. This is a home to be proud
of! Offered at S179,000. Please call
for further Information and a per¬
sonal tour.
Other fine new residences with
above average size, quality and
acpointments and sweeping views
in High Gordon Heed from
$135,000.
STEVE MOONEY
3A5-77AI (24 hrs.) 477-4197 (Res.)
STOP!
LOOK! ’
tratingl Here's the perfect' combi
nation of attractive 3-bedrm, fami¬
ly home, low taxes, reasonable
price, lovely setting and handy
location. From the moment you
see the conrforlabie living room
with it's full height stone fireplace,
open bearns and lovely wood fea¬
ture wall, the w-w carpeting
•throughout and the big lot with a
park across the street, you'll stop
looking and start moving ini Put
away your frustrations: call now!
ViM Royal near Portage Inlet.
Asking $64,900. MLS.
STEVE MOONEY
335-7761 3. hrs.
3 BEDROOMS
3,900
Oak Bay "Estevan"
Well maintained home In one of
Oak Bay's finer locations. 1328 sq.
ft., 20x1$ living room and I3xtl
dining area. Striking black-tile
fireplace. Kitchen enters onto sun-
deck and includes eating area. 3
bedrms on the main and one
down. Driva-in garage. 62x107
(mature) landscaped lot with rear
service home. Distinctive wrought-
iron fencing In front garden. For
more Information on this new list¬
ing, call.
BRIAN SHARP
3JS.776I 34 hrs, 477-4753 Res.
Goldstream Area
CUSTOM BUILT
Do you long for that open, free
feeling around your home? This
iwners* tSns^r*’ w« '^c*a?i«lK? Central Slmpson-
old Ibr hom^Tn wWV 0^*^' home
pleasant seS'nQ^^fsoO ^a ft wt
n Bin fliS- and^ fl '’P®"' ' ''OOm Of
full Wtchtn with
PAT VICKERY
593-6192 Ras.
D. F. HANUbY AGENCIES LTD.
3293 DOUGLAS STREET
385-7761
GORDON HEAD
.A 4-Level Split
4 or 5 Bedrms.
118,000
Spacious 2900 sq. ft. of luxury
completely finished and best suited
for the large femllles. 3 full
baihrms: LR 21x15 with brick fire¬
place: DR 12x10: kitchen 16 x 12 ;
family room 17.6x13.4 with feature
rosewood wall centred by an
impressive white rock fireplace.
Master bedroom of 14.6x14.6 will
surely even accommodate your
largest ste. Rec room 19.6x13 pro¬
fessionally finishtd in English pub
style. Gorgeous laundry room. Lot
averages 95x10$ and 2 blocks from
public beach access. Sea glinvpses.
Quiet cul dc sec. 1520 Tfedemann
Piece. MLS 17744.
BILL WESTCDTT
3$S 7761 24 hrs. 477-S402 Res.
NEW LISTING
SPARKLING CITY
VIEWS, $71,900
Legal Duplex Suite
This 21-year-old homo Is sat on a
high 80x159 lot with SWEEPING
views of city and Olympics. Has 3
large bedrms on main floor, LR
and DR with good quality broad-
loom, bright kltchan overlooking
secluded backyard. Down, thare is
a LEGAL DUPLEX SUITE
finished In quality plaster to help
with the paymantsi MLS.
JERRY MIREAU
385-7761 24 hrs. 3I5-3930 Ret.
SOUTH OAK BAY
2 or 3 bedrms. Living room with
fireplace and in-line dining room.
Bright kltcl^n with extracup¬
boards. 2 bathrooms. Full base¬
ment. Finished rac room. wHh fire¬
place. Separate oarage and
smaller easy-to<are for lot. Priced
for action af $M,S 0 O.
BILL CARNEGIE
335-7761 344)n. 653-3637 RN.
VIEW ROYAL
3 or 4 bedrms, large living room
with fireplace. Separate dining
room. Compact kitchen. Full base¬
ment with two finished rooms,
drive-ln garage and laundry. This
is a large family home offered at
$57,000. MLS 1821$.
BILL CARNEGIE
315-7761 34-lirA 653-3637 Ras-
ESTATE SALE
Price Reduced to
$59,500
Simpsons-Saars araa, renovated
older home in meticulous condi¬
tion. Coay living room with flre-
plece end bullt-ln leaded glau
Nicely decorated 2-badrm. home
on good sized lot. Built In 1955
with immaculate hardwood floors.
F.P. and dining room. Utility room
off kitchen and workshop off car¬
port. Crawl space. A good home In
cupMrds and buffat. Spacious 1 nice' aree at $4,500. MLS. Ola
ytchen with ample cupboards. Knudskov, 598-2461 or 386-6164.
bedrooms on main complete oooo r’orw/c r'nrc
lerjje welk in closets. B^osd-| Z^ro oKUVb CKco
(SIDNEY)
Two bedrooms on main complete
with large welk-in closets. Broed-
loomed throughout. Full basement,
detached garage. Immediate
posseuion. call: i a
John M. Hunter 0^^ Amelia
311-6434 (Sn-60731
Beach Drive
Condominium
Deluxe 1 bedroom top floor sulfa
In concrete building with saevicw.
close to Marina and Golf Course.
MUST BE SOLD
i 14l«q. tt.
. Sunken llv-
fireplace, L-shaped living _
and dining room with fireplace
and access to sundeck.' Master Br
with 2-pce ensuite. Offers consid¬
ered to asking prica of $66,500. To
view, call.
HERM WILLIAMS
385-7761 24 hrS.
Cordova Bay Ridge
Fantastic Sea View
CRAFTMANSHIP QUALITY
BUILT
This new listing offers
of superbly built home,
ing room, separate dining with
teak panelling and built-in China
cabinet. Custom-made oak kitchen
cabinets plus built-in dishwasher
and range. Sundeck extending
from the living room to kitchen
overlooking Cordova Bay and San
Juan Is. Three bedrms up. 2>'2
baths. Roughed-ln rec room. 2 fire¬
places. Attached double garage.
Ail this on a beautifully land¬
scaped 100x120 ft. lot. $109,500.
BRIAN SHARP
385-7761 24 hrs. 477-4753 Res.
3 BEDROOMS
$76,900
GORDON HEAD RACQUET CLUB
Contemporary spitt-levet of over
1400 sq. ft. finish^. L-shat^ liv¬
ing and dining . Built-in dishwash-
ar and aating area In kitchen.
21.6x13.6 family room off kitchen.
• Private court yard. Closa to UVic
this homo offers 2 baths and
61 x 100 easy cara lot.
BRIAN SHARP
335-7761 34 hr,. 653-3637 R3S.
3353761 34 hn.
HOME PLUS
IN-LAW SUITE
NOW $57,900
PRICE HAS BEEN REDUCED on
this attractiva home In the populer
Town and Country area. Have the
main floor for yourself with LR,
separate DR, updated kitchen, util¬
ity room, 2 BRs, 4-pce bath, W-W
throughout and have the separate
upstairs for irwiaws or income. It
contains LR, separate OR, BR,
kitchen and 3-Ke. bath. FlexiWc
financing. MLS.
PAT VICKERY
385-7761 24 hrs. 592-6192 Res.
ESQUIMALT
4 Bedrms. $57,900
Near Esquimalf High, on 50x150
ft. lot with fencad backyard, this
18-vr.<ld home has LR with fire¬
place and W-W: large kitchen with
dining area; 2 BRs and 4-pca bath
on main. Down are 2 mere BRs,
rac room and laundry area. MLS.
PAT VICKERY
385-7761 36 hn. 563-6193 RE6-
FOUR BEDRMS.
ONE-STEP HOME
$54,900
SITUATED ON 8IXI33 FT- LEVEL
LOT, this older home has nearly
1,400 sq. ft. on one level. With the
addition of a staircase, a largt
room could be added in the floored
attic. Very large kitchen could be
altered to add dining room. Other
features are: utility room; laundry
room; oil hot-water heat; separate
oarage; 9x12 greenhouse and an
attractiva garden. MLS.
PAT VICKERY
335-7761 34 hn. 593-6193 R|6.
ROCKLAND
McClure
Situated on almost an acre of very
well kept grounds (with the possi¬
bility of an extra M). This fine
example of AAcClure architecture
wilt pass tha test of the most dis-
cnminetinq purchaser. Eight
bedrms, NINE fireplaces, a bil¬
liard room, den, PLUS the feature
rooms that make a McClure home
outstanding. Full oak panallad din¬
ing room, carved celling living
room, huge entrance hell with fire¬
place. This large home could easi¬
ly accommodafe a consolidation of
In-laws to ona residence. Presently
It has a vary attractive Income at¬
tached. MLS. For more exacting
details and an appointment to view
this property lust listed and priced
at $265,000, pleasa call:
Doug Bavington
335-7761 24 Fn. 5»3939 Rt6.
SOUTH OAK BAY
$64,900
3 BEDROOMS
NEW LISTING
A very popular style in an excep¬
tional area. Living room with fire¬
place and carpeting; full bsmf.
which could be further developed;
drIve-in garage, 42xtl9 easy-care
lot and 1164 sq. ft. main floor liv¬
ing area. MLS 19079. Drive by 2373
C(jOKMAN ST. but showings must
be by appointment ONLYI
BILL WESTCOTT
385-7761 24 Hrf. 477-5402 Re$
2330 sq. ft. finished. Four bed¬
rooms, three bathrooms, two' fire¬
places, 36x17 recreation room,
(ideal for entertaining), extensive
covered sundeck and double car-
;Port. Quiet cul de sac. Intercom
sYStom, arid tots more. Asking
oniyjl4,9o0. Irene D8lz«l 3864t64
or 477^^.
CORDOVA BAY
Two excellent properties tor sale
in this desirable area
1. Waterfront point 3 acres with bl.
|2-bdrm Mch with fireplace
upper unit. A very quiet area ..
new homes. Now rented upper
I $375, lower $275. Make an offer. i
Call
RENE BOURDIN
477-1841 642-4150
Rockland
Contemporary
.^.A,ious family and antertaln-
menl-orlented home (2,700 so. ff.)
situated high on e perkilke ^ acre
professionally landscaped lot with .. _ ..
gorgeous sea views. Huge living | level its not large but very sound
—- j—.1-...-- ........ a...... ...
and dining rooms, family sized and secluded. __
kitchen, den and grand entrance-! professionals or retlrads.
way on main floor, 4-5 bedrooms, 3 only $79,900.00.
baths Including master ensuite, “
sundecks, patios, quality carpeting,
double carport and much more.
Must be seen. $128,000 M.L.5.
17663.
David Billingham
3M-6424
n/ai ACRES
EAST SCXDKE
If quiet Is what you are looking
for, then you must sea this
2-bedrm home on the waters of
Sooke. Approximately 90 feet of
beach frontage. Also a very good
well end access to the beach.
You'll love this one. Asking only
$62,500 or make an offer. Call
2. I2S0 Sq. Ft. no-step rancher only
1 bik. from the sea. Large lot with
natural duck pond. Home Is be-
beautifully decorated Inside and
out. To view these exceptlonel pr>
parties anytime call Hazel Camp¬
bell 386-6164 or 592-0632.
SIDNEY
EXECUTIVE
The large rec room has a built in
bar, a fireplace and a floor you
can dance on. (and that is by the
way). Thera are three lovely bed¬
rooms on the main floor, a large
living room also with a fireplace.
Three bathrooms and an extra
bedroom downstairs. The extensive
Beautifully decorated. Swlrlpool, covered sundeck is over a double
sauna, workshop end underground carport. A modern kitchen with a
parking. This Is a rare oppor- < ikrgt eating area. Vendor has pur-
tunity, so call now for an appoint-! phased, so take a quicl^ook at
ment to view.
;thls one.^king only $84,900. Irene
r\ j D ll* u I Dainei'iiTT^ijiio'or 314 - 6144 !
David Billingham GORGE—$49,900
IA truly secluded gardeners delight,
this cozy 2 bedroom home offers
excellent accommodation for new¬
ly-weds or retlrads. Covered sun¬
deck off the modern kltch^ for
Mom and a saparata 360 sq. ft.
workshop for Dad, with a stparate
nuest room. For more details on
Ross Bay
SEABOARD
PROPERTIES LTD.
7173 WEST SAANICH KO.
•KENTWOOD BAY W-lltt
1269 KNUTE WAY—BRENTWOOD.
Located on quiet no-through street,
close to elementary school and
shopping. This 3-bedroom, ll/ii bath
home on 90 ft. wide W It only
three .years old. L-ihaped living
and dininq room with wood pan¬
eled wall and stone fireplace.
Kitchen has lots of custom built
cupboards, dining arta and patio
door leading to sundeck os%r car¬
port. Downstairs has roughad-ln
activity room (Rl fireplace) and
three other rooms and plumbinq
for half bath. Reer yard Is partial¬
ly fenced with garden area and
strata play aree for children.
Priced at $64,900 with financing
avalleble.
652-1141 FRANK CSINOS 6S2-5S28
SAANICH-$42,900
980 LAVENDER
Older 2-bedroom home in quiet
area — fireplace, partial base¬
ment. Near Spectrum School.
Could be low down payment to
quefified purchaser.
652-1141 FRANK CSINOS 653-5521
SECLUSION
ON AN ACRE IN BRENTWOOD.
WOODLAND AND WATER VIEWS
FROM LV. RM., DN. RM. AND
KITCHEN WINDOWS. 3 BDRMS.
FULL BSMT. SUNDECK AND C.
P. MLS 16980. TRY AN OFFER
ON $75,000.
652-1141 ROSE RUSE 652-2694
BRENTWOOD
1 10X DAA4ELART. NEW S BD.
RM. V/2 BTHS. FULL BSMT.
QUIET AREA. ASKING $68,900.
2 7269 EARLY PLACE. YR. OLD
HOME VERY NICELY AP¬
POINTED. OBL. C.P. WITH
SUNDECK OVER. LAND¬
SCAPED. MLS 18248. $63,900.
652-1141 ROSE RUSE 653-2694
CONVENIENT
CLOSE
COMFORTABLE
$49,900
Three bedroom full besement.
older home located close to
schools, shops, hoepitai and
busts. An Ideal starter home of¬
fering a large 57‘xt80' lot, 3
large bedrooms. Generous sized
living room end large kitchen.
Full basement Ideal for work-
shoo end storage area. Drive by
I72S Newton Street then cell fv
en eppointment to view.
Dave [Jand
652-1141 658-8490
Len Watson
652-1141 652-2108
Don't miss this lovely family home
in a vary pleasant area of Fair-
llaM. just ona block from the
beach. <Tha main floor features
large living room, dining room,
two bedrooms, all with quatlty
W-W. Upstairs there are two more
bedrooms and vary tastefully
finished bathroom with laundry fa¬
cilities. There's room for more
development in high basement.
Lovely secluded garden. Asking
$77,9 o6. M.L.S.
David Billingham
33B4434
Oak Bay
5-Room Bungalow
$62,500
SHusted en e quiet street close to
Oek Bay Golf Course, this retire¬
ment type home contains living
room, dining room. 2 bedrooms on
main floor and 1 down. Full bese¬
ment, drive-ln garage. Easy care
garden with small graanhousa.
June Houghton
3334334 (Rel. 4774135)
"Hobby Horse"
Elk Lake
$119,000
Two acres of cleared level and
fenced land located on a quiet cul-
de-sac off Old West Saanich Rd.
above Elk Lake. Two-year-old
tudor style residence features
three bedrooms, sowing room, den
or office, large family room, 2'/>
bathrooms, cantilevered natural
rock firtpleca and burnt sable ac¬
cents In living room and dining
room. A practical sized hobby
farm with pastoral country vlavm
over acres and acres of rural un¬
developed properties. Immediate
possession possible. M.L.S.
Brent D. Ewing
3134434 (R«. 5A4MI)
St. Charles
Fairfield
_, 3-bedroom located en a
beautifully landscaped lot with
fully fenced garden. Gracious llv-
ii^ room, bright dining room and
attractiva kitchen with eating area
and lets of cupboards. Nicely de¬
veloped besement with specious
rec room and 3-pce. bath. This Im¬
maculate home is In A-1 condition
end oHered for lAAMEOIATE OC-
CUPANCY at the reduced price of
$73,900.
June Houghton
388-6424 fRes. 477-6115)
WHY
Drive Around the
Country Looking
For a Home?
WE NOW HAVE A COM¬
PLETE REAL ESTATE
GUIDE (with pictures) WHICH
ANY ONE OF OUR 40 SALES-
PEOPLE WOULD BE HAPPY
TO LET YOU STUDY OVER-
NIGHT. RELAX AT HOME
AND SEARCH FOR YOUR
NEW HOUSE. WONDERING
HOW MANY BEDROOMS-
JUST LOOK IN THE BOOKI
DON'T HESITATE, CALL
TODAY.
386-2911
Hemefinders. Will snd Redekop
.-CENTRAL SAANICH
l-year-old, 3-bsdrqpm, full base¬
ment, spilt level, 1V^ beths, fire¬
place, fenced, pertlalty land¬
scaped. tmmed. occupancy op¬
tional. Drepes, fridge, stove In¬
cluded, ulsoo. 1899 Seaboard
Cres., 652-3649.
FOR SALE, 2-BEDROOM HOME
in Royal Oek aree, close to shop¬
ping, schools, bus stop. Phone
479-8837.
Quality
beautiful
ESQUIMALT
This is not your average 2-bed-
room home. SpackMie. no steps,
starter or retirement, m mint con¬
dition. 14x16 llvlno room, 17x12
kitchen with view of Gorge waters.
4-pc. bath, utility room, plumbed
W-D, Sep. garage, greenhouse.
Asking Price of $484100 includes
stove, fridge, deep freeze, washer,
dryer, drapes. Call Bruce Mclirov,
386-7545, ML 19194.
LANGFORD
7 BEDROOMS
2 FULL
BATHROOMS
Modern 4-vear-old, sheka roof, oak
floors, large lot. Carpets, stove,
fridge, dishwasher and some furni¬
ture included. Three lady guests
paying approx. $990 per month
room and board would Ilka to stay
on with new owners. Pesaeealon 10
daw Price $68,900 with approx.
$104)00 down, present income will
more than carry mortgage pay¬
ments and taxes. Call M. Pullen at
386-7545 or 477-1578.
iercmL,
REALTY LTD.
a Baallaa H Wm. «MIM
FOR URBAN, SUBURBAN AND
RURAL PROPERTIES. RELY ON
EXPERIENCE.
Saanich — By Owner
$46,900 '
2-bedroom, no-stap bungalow with
attached garage, 14 acre lot, five
mature fruit trees. Ideal starter or
retirement. Drive by 8^ Ralph
Street, 479-4171 or 38$44I3 (ans.
PRIVATE, COLWOOD, 560 HALL-
lor Drive, spllt-laval, 3 bedrooms,
livlngroom, dining room, kitchen
with eating area, rumous and utili¬
ty, Aliain areas, carpet over hard¬
wood, carport and double drive¬
way. Fenced yard with vegetabla
garden and fruit trees and largt
petlo. Asking $61,600. Phone
478-4931 efter 6 p.m. to view.
HELP WE HAVE 2 HOMES,
we'd Ilka new owners for our 2
bedroom duplex, carpet through¬
out, glass doors to patio, large es-
sumeble mortgage plus will carry
a second If desired. Lot 81x250 in
quiet vea of Langford, priced et
leu than cost $37400. 478-4454.
PRIVATE SALE, GORDON
iaad, 8 bedrooms, office, quiet
jtraet, closa to all amenities,
worth seeing, 1690 Sheridan Ava.
477J830.
guest room. For more details on
this picturesque property, cell
Tom Raig or Irena Dalzlel at Cas¬
tle Properties. 3864164 or 38S-1606.
MLS.
IMMACULATE
$53,900
This lovely home has much to
offer, like new hardwood floors,
living room with fl^lace, 2 large
bedrooms, kitchen and eating
area. Full basement has rec. room
with bar. Situated on a large
lovely lot. MLS. For more Info
call Rick O'Kane, Bus. 286-6164,
Rea. 479-5533.
CLOSE TO WOOLCO
$45,900
Nicely renovated 2 bdrm, part
bsmt. home with seperafe work¬
shop on well maintained tot. Walk¬
ing distance to shopping and
school, spotless throughout. To
view call Lyle Marrington 386-6164
or 385-0302 New MLS.
PANAMA FLATS
$62,500
Enioy tha view In the summer and
strap on your skates In the winterl
Just fresh on the market. This
thirtean-year-old home offers great
accommodation. Three bedrooms,
L<oom with fireplace, dining area
Pius full baument offering room
for further development on a well-
landscaped lot of shrubs and flow¬
ers overlooking Panama Flats on
Carey Rd. For viewing plexse cell
Bob Kohlruu, 3844164, 288-4563.
GORGE
$48,900
3 bedroom full basement solid
home in attractive surroundings.
Living room with fireplace, drive
in garage. MLS. Call Chris Greig
386-6164 or 478-5953.
GLANFORD
$63,900
8-month-old 3-badroom, full base¬
ment home on quiet cul-de-uc.
Featuru newly landscaped lot, en
suite plumbing and much, much
more. New MLS. Call Chris Craig
or Bob Kohlruu, 386-6164 or
3824563 or 478-S9S3.
IN-LAW SUITE
(.aroa family room 0,310 sq. ft.)
on 66x100 tot. Main floor haa
18x14 Sunken living room with fire¬
place. three good size bedrooms, 3
pee and 4-pca. baths. Downstairs
extra bedroom and laroe recrea-
Hon wm and FULL BACHELOR
SUITE. Custom built and absolute¬
ly Immaculate, inside and outside.
GLANFORD AREA
This quality built two-bedroom
home Is oeiightfully decorated
throughout. Sunny kitchen with
aating area. Utility room off kitch¬
en, wall-to-wall carpets, fireplace
In living room. This hom« is •x-
tremaly welt priced at $49,900. For
further Infornsallon and to view In¬
side, call Irmgard Knudskov at
386-6164 or 598-2461.
SOUTH OAK BAY
SxS duplex In this choice area.
LIva In one side and let the rent
K y your mortgage. Well land-
s 2 BRs, LR with FP end oak
floors. Sep. DR. One has 3rd BR
scaped lot. Full bsmt. Each tide
and rec. rm. in basement. Drive-
under graage. New MLS. To view
call Hazel Campbell, 3864164 or
592-0632 anytime.
NEW LISTING
3336 KINGSLEY
Immaculate condition, 2 bedrooms,
full bsmt. living room with fire¬
place. Large kitchen with eating
araa. Well treed lot for privacy,
Frutt trees and vegetable garden.
Be the first to set this gem only
$54,900. Quickly cell Irene Dalzlel,
386-6164 or 477-6380.
EXTRA PRIVACY
Close to university, all schools.
Shopping and busu la this imnrtac*-
utate 34>adroom home on e quiet
cul-de^ac. Large living room with
w-w carpet Into dining room. Spa¬
cious kitchen has full grain alt-
wood cupboards. Drlve^n base¬
ment has some develooment
(could be 4th bedroom). 169,^.
MLS 18206.
HUNTLEY WRIGHT
477-1841 477-0197
TIDY TUDOR
quaint 34)adroom bungalow
reedy to move into nowl Large
kitchen with pantry Ilka mother
had. Living room with firapiaca
and w-w carpet. Private sundeck
end fenced play area for children.
846,900. AALS 18910.
HUNTLEY WRIGHT
477-1841 477-0897
MARIGOLD
SECLUSION
Situated et the end of a quiet no-
through lane, on i large secluded
B arden, a spacious 2-bedroom
ome. Living room with fireplace,
roomy kitchen with a large adloin-
ing sundeck. Excellent family
room. Offered at $57^.
TED WAL^RD
477-1841 598-1420
SOUTHERN VIEWS
ROYAL OAK
Looking for a difforent home with
a acre and yet clou to town?
See this beautlral Dutch Cc^niel
home on the Broadmeed fringe.
Hug# colonial kitchen with views
and sundeck off, 4 bdrms, open
beam, L.R., rec. room with bu
and fireplace, double carport.
Drive by 870 Royal Oak but call
me to SM inside. Great value at
$113,900. AAL 17497.
JEFF CHALK
4n-184t 477-8274
OAK BAY
VILLAGE
Situated on a peaceful no-through
street, lust minutes walk from Oak
Bay Vlllaga, a 2^adreom m^rn
home in superb condition. Specious
llvine Toom with red brick fire¬
place, dining arta and a large
beautifully appointed kltchan wffh
breakfast room and an adioininq
sundeck. Smalt but private gard(m.
Roughed in 3rd bedroom in base¬
ment Offered et $69,500.
TED WALFORD
C^a Residanee
477-1841 598-1420
YOUR OWN
PRIVATE WORLD
Security, privacy, beauty and dig-
nlW are yours In this la-year-old
cottage on 1.46 acres. $78,000 and
you've bought the potential to
change your life to whet you want
to make it. Bruk out. DM't be
bound by convention. Proiect your
^ personality Into this proparty.
H nee^ sdmaene with Imagina¬
tion. It naeds youl It's 2 bdrms,
mavb# 3, laroe kitchen and dining
area, 22' L.R., rock F.P., guest
cottage and studio, duck pond,
wild IlM, patio, fish pond, 2 lots
each 120' frontage. AAodem and yet
rustic. Coma and sea It.
^ RONALD WAY
^•1841 5984852
CORDOVA BAY
A superb buyl A S-vur-oW home,
1235^ sq. ft, en main floor, full
bsmt, with 2 extra rooms, cedar
shake roof, 2 bdrms, great sunny
sundack, 70x120 lot, area of top
quality hemes neer beach access
A^^900. Hurry for this one. ML
JEFF CHALK
477-1841 477-8374
SIDNEY
FAMILY HOME
Treat youruif to a personal In-
•Ptctloo of this fully modern, so¬
lidly built 4-bedrm. full baununt
how north of Beacon Ave. within
walklno distance to beach access
on a wild bird sanctuary. Gtnar-
OM rized. fully fencKi backyard
and landua^ front. Hardwood
floors throuohout. Covared surtdack
owtoote large portable pool.
Sto^. fridqe, washer, dryer In¬
cluded at 1^.500 or lesser offers
accepted without the extras.
BROWN
_ 595^5
PLAN AHEAD!
FOR RETIREMENT
FOR STARTER
IN OAK BAY
Truly delightful and spacious 3-BR
bungalow on fine south Oak Bay
corner lot. Presently leased for
revenue until you It! Whole
property In excellent condition and
bargain priced, MLS at
$57,500
SUPERB SEAVIEW
CADBORO BAY
High quality, spacious homa, over-
looking Cadboro Bay. 3 for 4) BR,
family size kitchen, large DR and
LR, 3 bihrms., rec room, 2 fire-
piacu, well landscaoed secluded
lot. Priced at only $119,000. (MLS).
View with
DRk Batey 593-4607
Kelly Dkkson 477-1683
MWMTB V, in.
M-inO DOUGLAS .)S24IS1
REDUCED
FOR QUICK SALE
$42,900
LOVELY 2 BEDROOM, FULL
BASEMENT HOME ON QUIET
STREET. FEATURES INCLUDE
LEADED STAINED GLASS WIN¬
DOWS, CARVED OAK FIRE¬
PLACE, NEW WALL-WALL AND
LINO, LARGE KITCHEN AND
REC. ROOM. CONVENIENT LO¬
CATION. CLOSE TO SHOPPING,
PARK AND ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL, PRICED BELOW MAR¬
KET Value for quick
TRANSACTION AS MUST BE
SOLD. CALL OWNER AT 477-0444
OR 384-0385.
UNIVERSITY AREA
$65,500
By owner, 3-4 bedrooms. baths,
fully developed beument. Fenced,
lendscaped lot. (^age. 477-3379.
BY OWNER, COTTAGE. I-BEO-
room, baument, furnished, large
lot, clou to shoooing, Khools, end
university. 477-2745.
$72,900
MARGARETS
BEACH
MT. [X>UGLAS PK.
first ADVERTISEMENT ON
BEAUTIFUL ONE-YEAR-
OLD HOME ONLY 5 MINUTES
^LK TO BEACH. OVER 1320
S<3. FT. ON MAIN FLOOR FEA-
WALLS
IN LIVING ROOM, DINING
ROOM WITH PATIO DOOR AND
OLD BRICK ARCH. E^LLENT
WORKABLE KITCHEN FOR THE
WOMAN, MERIT CABINETS, DE-
L U X E LI NO, DISH WASH E R,
GARBURATOR AND LARG^
II^AWTE^ EATING AREA 3
BEDROOMS WITH QUALITY
FINISHING AND 1»,^»^BATHS
FULL BASEMENT. NICELY
^NOSCAPEO, TREED SECLUD¬
ED REAR YARD. LARGE $45,000
A60RTGAGE ATIO’-i^ AVAIlT
BRIAN BUTLER
595-5171, 477-6534
or 479-3029
(Call for Weekend
Drive by Address)
CANADA TRUST
BY OWNER
$140,000
MERIDALE HOUSE
Meridale Rd.
Metchosin
On 3.8 acres, unique 2-storey,
brick and cedar home.
First floor; Pleasant hall (lOxlO)
with polished oek floor. 3 double
bedrms, 14x11, carpeted,
bathroom, utility room.
Second floor: Custom T and G
cedar, open beam, oak floors.
Light kitchen ebove hall. Din.
room 13xlS Study, bedrm 15x11.
Living room 24x11, large heattla-
tor. rough rock fireplace.
Triple gerege with room above
20x30.
This homa hat many artistic and
practical featuru which combine
to make It pleasingly different.
Exemplu are brkk work, cus¬
tom genuin# leadad glass, 8x12 In.
X 18 ft. beams in Y2 ft. high living
room. Leaded glow in doors, olT-
fired H.W. heating for economy.
Situated well back from road on
hillside, ocean end mountain view.
Pleasantly landuapad wHh no-
werteds, lawns and paved terract.
Most of acraage undisturbed — a
bird haven.
Further details, plaau phone
478-2356.
CEDAR HUX ROAD
NEAR KINGS
Completely renovated 2 • ateray,
3-bedroem home with large llvin-
groom and modem kitchen. Wall-
to-wall throughout. 220' deep lot
with fruit trees and double car¬
port. $49,900. To view call 316-7985.
FAMILY SPECIAL
Lovely one yr. old Glanford ^
Ar^a home. 4 bedrooms.
CTK>nhous kitchen and nu¬
merous extras. Excellent
value at $63,900. Make us an
oHer.
JAC^QUIE PIPES
59S.51fi6 S82-%:6 '
ESQUIMALT
2 bedrooms, 21 yrs. c^d,
plaster throughout, coned
ceilings, Oek Floors. Cer>
pets remain. Full, high
basement, large rec. room^
Easily converted to inlavy
suite. 3 piece bath down.
Several fruit trees. Good
garden soil. Must be sold.
Asking $54,500.00. Call
MARY JAMES
598-5166 386-9690
MODERN LIVING
Esquimalt condominium
with 3 BR’s and twx) 3 pc.
bath. Tlie way to have a
modem home that welcfnnes
children. Ul and DR cab.
elec, kitchen. Vacant and
redecorated. Low upkeep.
S42 W)
MRS. Me KEAGE
386-8871 479*5868
CLOSE TO TOWN
3 BRs, 2 baths, F.C. bsmt.
Easily duplexed. On Ige.
comer lot. $47,500. Call;
MRS. Me KEAGE
386-8871 479-5868
NEW IN VIEW
ROYAL
3 BR's, Ige. L-shaped LR
and DR. light cab. elec,
kitchen. 4 pc. bath. FC
finished bsmt. with rec. rm.,
BR utility OOM Ige. lot on
quiet street. Choose your
own W-W colors. A new
quality built home.
MRS. Me KEAGE
386-8871 479^868
VIEW ROYAL
AGAIN
Move right In. 3 BR, no
steps, in top condition. Cab.
eiec. kitchen, stove and
frieze included. LR with
FP. W-W utility. PT bsmt.
OOM furaoce. DouUe
garage with guest rm. on %
acre. Orchard, shrubs, fish
pond, on bus. all new’er
homes in area. $59,900.
MRS. Me KEAGE
386-8871 479-5868
tS4.W
SHAWNIGAN LAKE
Beautiful 3 or 4-bodroom home on
a fint village lot. 2 years old. 2
fireplacos. Basement rtady for
completion into e separate suite.
Lot Is fenced for dogs. MLS 18539.
$50,900
SHAWNIGAN LAKE
. square fut, 3-bedroom home.
-JIgftfful Interior. Kitchen break¬
fast room and dining room all
have doors to sundeck. Bulit-ln
dIshwMher, large master bedroom
with beth. In the Vlllege. Half
buement. OuaUty home.
$39,500
. , OVER 4 ACRES
LIveeble summer cottage 5 miles
from Shawnigan Village. Drilled
well, too amp service. Brick chim¬
ney, large fencad area. Lots of dry
firewood for tha cast Iron wood
hutar. MLS 18538.
$63,900
SHAWNIGAN LAKE
2,000 squara fut of living space all
preUsslonally finished. In tha Vil-
laga. 2 yurs old, 4 Badrooms, 3
bathrooms. Included are washer,
dryer, stove, fridge, dishwasher
and drapu. All brand name appii-
ancas. N\LS 18186.
743-5331 JOHN ETTEMA 743-2607
743-5331 AAARIEMALBON 7434145
Call Cotlart Anytime
598-5166
386-8871
©
B.C. LAND
AND INSURANCE
AGENCY LTD.
ROOMY
PRIVACY
tmmaculata 3 BR put and beam
homa of pleMlng duign on large
100x120 ff. lot. Magnificent trus
you will be proud to own. Fire¬
place, nice w-w carpeting and
laundry room on main floor.
Developed basement hu 15x24
pool room plus 12x18 rac. room.
StMrate garage and axtra park¬
ing. Over 1250 sq. ft., a good buy
at $63,700.00. Colwood MLS 18197.
Gall G. Oaviu B.C. Land 998-5992,
or 478-5588.
Tod Hackett
TEN MILE PT.
(BAYNES RD. AT TUDOR)
2 NEW
EXECUTIVE
HOMES
3000 Baynu Rd.
3002 Baynu Rd.
EACH FEATURE
-Large living and dlnlnq room
-Family-sized kitchen
—Recreetlon room
—4 bedrooms
—2Vb bethr o onu
—Laundry room
—Double room
—Ooubla driva-ln garage
—Lendscaped V!^ecre lot
Open to View
WEDNESDAY
THRU SUNDAY
FOR A60RE
INFORMATION CALL
DON KING
384-1101 477-5554
COURTESY TO REALTORS
CTTEJ
J. D. Meinnit
Cof U r Bc tof B LM.
NO YARD WORK. STRATA Du¬
plex. Lovely view overlooking city.
On quiet street oppulte Wilderneu
Park. iVi years old, over 1700
square fut developed. Large,
bright family kltchea with aUding
doors, to southern bakeny. Floot
to-ceiling fleptece in living roomV
Luxurious carpet, champagne
beige Hudughout. 3 bedroonts, IVb
baths, Hu office space, laundry
facilities, good storage, carport,
and spacious entry. Best of all,
small no maintenance yard. Good wwwn, v«i-
landiceped front yard. Rec.
appliances. $55,900. Open houu - -• • -
Sunday, 1:» p.m.-4:30 p.m. 1257
Kings Road. 383-1540.
Home with a Future
Legal Duplex
Zoned Commercial
-leru landscapad homa in A-t
condition.
—Ideel location, offices, shops,
store, antiquu, pub, etc
ai7S4)0O-TERMS, 385-5150.
OAK BAY BORDER
Reduced to $49,900. 3 B.R.’s.
1^ baths. Call; STAKE-
LAND 384094 or SHANE
38&«71 or 388^75 PAGER
No. 574 anytime.
NE^VSTE^AD REALTY LTD.
GLANFORD AREA
$60,500
Large quality built 4 bedroom
home. Hardwodo floors, full high
baument with den. treed lot witn
garden Offers. 535 Agnus St.
479-3134.
OPEN HOUSE
1303 Bay St. 1:30-4:00 p.m. Aug. 21
and 22. 3 bedrooms, large living-
room, dining eru, fireplace, 4
piece beth, 2 piece bath and
rumpus room In baument.
385-5068.
GORGE
$53,900 — Five room modem,
besement, stucco bungalow, idul
retirement or starter home. On
terms or clear title lor cuh. Cell
Fred Marconi anytime, don't irtiss
this. ML 18m.
MARCONI REALTY 386-3941
$39,000
Older IVb storey home, 3 bed¬
rooms, good conditon, excellent
starter or hendyman investor
home. 1283 Denman Strut, off
Farnwood. Phone 592-7400 after
8:00 p.m.
PRIVATE SALE
Large modern houu plus 6W
ecru, fenced end level. Natural
rtd and lots of nk# treu. Dpen
^ers on $97X100. Phone 743-2969,
Cobble Hill.
BY OWNER - HiGH QUADRA
Large femlly home, top condition.
Aik^^$7l,W0. 3740 Craigmliiar.
LUXURIDUS
CAREFREE LIVING
1225 TATTERSALL DRIVE
The central spindle staircau,
floor-to-ceiling slate fireplace,
bullt-ln dishwasher, wrap-erownd
coder sundeck, urth-toned floor
coverings, formic# faced cabinets
and excellent central location
highlight this exceptlonat resi¬
dence. Offered et $95X)00. This
beautHui West Coest Cedar homa
may be viewed et your conve¬
nience.
NEW LUXURY HOME
1203 TATTERSALL DRIVE
Thru bedrooms up—one dc.
Beeutiful vudgewood light tlxturu,
white brick ftreplece, dishwasher,
formica faced cabinets. 4-pce. bath
on main, 2-pu. ensuite. 2-pce. In
besement. Shake roof, double cer-
port, landsceped front yard. Rec.
room with R.-l. Nre^ace, ready to
be finished. $75xxi0 meku this well
eppointed home truly dtslrabie.
480-482 FOSTER ST.
Real merit In each half of this
strata duplex. 4-pce. bath, two
bedrooms, living, Mtchen, utlng
arus, laundry facllltlu, off-strut
parking. Exceptional value
$36,500 per unit.
384-9793 To View 384-8391
J. D. Meinnis Contractors Ltd.
3NEW-
HOMES!
BY BUILDER!
OPEN HOUSE
SUN. 1:304 p.m.
(2767, 2771, 2775 Ronald Rd.
Go out So(^e Rd., just past
Glen Lake Rd. turn right on
Ronald Rd.)
3-bedrooms. LAND-
SCAPEH!)! baths, two
fireplaces! Custom wood
)dt(^. cabinets! MANY
EXTRAS! REAL BUY AT
$61,460 with a mort¬
gage. See you on Sunday!
Molen Construction
658-1122 Anytime
ECONOMY
NEW HOME
3-BR AAodern home on new Cres¬
cent, requiru finishing Inside. Low
prke ule by builder. Ideal for
economy minded handyman. Bue¬
ment, garage, sundeck. FIreolace,
ell underground tervlcu. Near
schools and shopping. Call 591-3629
or 59541291.
SIDNEY SEAVIEW, YEAR-OLD 2
bedroom, full basement home.
Large femlly room. Low taxu,
nice lot on deed-end strut.
656^552.
HOUSEBOAT FOR SALE. SEE
boots end marine dassWcetlon.
498 Heed Street A Wharf.
wyiei jincc-i —
STARTER OR RETIREMENT
no CONARD
A bright, dun little 900 sq. ft.
houu for the young family or
retiring coiJple. Lovely lot with
fruit treu. Amongst nice
homu. Separate ]5'x24' outside
workshop. lO'xiS' kitchen,
12'x16' living room with fire¬
place. which can be expanded.
2 bedrooms. Large utility
room. Hurry bn this. MLS No.
19087. FRANK WILLS a1
598-3344.
SOUND $ $ VALUE
Immaculate 2-bedroom home
on fenced garden lot In quiet
aru. New kitchen cabinets,
large utility room — plumbed
for washer-drypir, fireplace in
cozy llvinq room, lovely pri¬
vate sundeck, all for only
$52,900. Can only be apprtci-
ated by viewing. Pleau call:
EDNA VLIET at 598-3344 any¬
time.
REDUCED, $69,901).
A lovely 3-bearoom split-entry
home in the Northridge aru.
Large famiiv kitchen u briqht
and cheerful. Huge rec. room
with fireplace. Workshop am
in basement. MLS No. 17439.
For details cell: BETTY
MCFARLAND or PHYLLIS
COUTTS at 598-3344.
QUALITY PLUS
1900 sq. ft. and only 2 yurs
old. This honu has to much to
offer — 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
Llvinq room hu B.C. marble
fireplace, bay window over-
Icoklng the Panama Flats.
Huge rec. room with old brick
fireplace and sink — rudy for
installation of wet bar. If you
are looking for something a lit¬
tle exciting and different. Ask-
Ino only $64,900. Pleeu rontect
BETTY McFarland or
PHYLLIS COUTTS at 901-3344.
MLS No. 19068. Priced at
$64,900.
CEDAR HILL AREA
$64,900. Over 1900 $q. ft. of
femlly living. 3-4 bedrooms,
1 V^ baths, patio off family
room for convenient berbecu-
ing. Lafge lot (OO'xm) for
garden or play. Call now for
vlewlrtg In this aru of IrKreis-
Ing value. BETTY McFAR
LAND or PHYLLIS COUTTS
at 598-334L
DESPERATE!!
■ avli _ .
_ _ qukkiy, „ _ _
look artd make any offers on
this fine family home in the
high part of Esquimalt. All
offers considered. Asking
$65,900. For further Irrforme-
tion pleeu call: DENNIS
BERRY at S98-334L
SOUTH OAK BAY
$54,900
we have e delightful 2-bed¬
room home perfect for retire¬
ment or young family, situated
on a very quiet strut.
—All vrall-t^welt carpeting.
—Living room, with ^replace.
—Dining room.
—Kitchen
—2 bedrooms and one down.
—Four-Piece beth.
—Large high beument.
—Lovely garden with rear en¬
trance.
This Is a rul cozy home and
will net last long on this mar¬
ket. For information on this
exclusive oluu contact: BILL
MOHR, S9B3331. 998-6716.
OAK BAY-WILLOWS-UPLANDS
Immaculate 2-bedroem home
In prime residential area.
Clou to buch and Uplartds
Park. L.R. has firoplaco, in¬
line D.R. Modern kitchen with
eatinq aru In bay window.
Utility room and sundeck off.
WoM-fo-wall through^. Full
basement with large finished
room with F.P. pIm smaller
room workshop. Drive-ln
gareu, back lane. Well-kept
well-stocked garden. This ex¬
cellent property Is offered at
$74,900. To view pluu call:
JOHN BARNES, 598-3321 or
598L243.
OAK BAY — CLOSE TO VIL¬
LAGE
Charming bungalow en quiet
cul-de-uc with buutiful u-
cluded garden. L.R. with fire¬
place, 2 B.R.s, den, large um-
rafe garage, one block from
Oak Bay Village. This atfrac-
tlve property is offered at
$64,900. to view pleau call;
toHN BARNES, 598-3321 or
598-4243 (ru.).
RITHET'S
0
for
Real Estate
Insurance
Appraisals
714 FORT
382-4251
CADBORO BAY
Here Is a home distinctively mod¬
ern In every wav, has bun com¬
pletely redone Inside and out.
Must bo seen." Luxurious carpth
Ing throughout. 4 bodrooms, 3
bathrooms, socluded rur yard end
patio. Attached garage and carport
with sundeck over. Attreclive en¬
trance and foyer. A very elegant
heme that is a plusure to show.
Exc. $135X100. View by appoint¬
ment only.
R. JOHNSON W. MICHAELS
382-4251
ACRE PLUS OF
LAND
ONLY w.m. Lml KiHt — Idial
for horus, garden etc. Nice two-
bedroom bungalow on property.
Located on Old Wut Saenlch
Rud. Clou in. For further details
pleue call:
W. BUTTERFIELD, 3854)858
$49,500
NEW LISTING
Attractive 2-bedroom stucco bun¬
galow situated on a largo 67x150
lot In a quiet treed eru of Lang¬
ford clou to acru of pork landi
at 2556 Selwyn. Good starter or re¬
tirement home has feature pan¬
elled wall, open fireplace, OOM
heat. Large 18x24 GARAGE on a
cement slab. To view pleau call:
W. MICHAELS R. JOHNSON
312-4251 (24-Hr. Service)
SIDNEY
4-vear-old, 3-be<troom plus beau¬
tifully ntalnfained home on large
fenced landscaped lot. Home fsa-
turi living room with fireplace,
dining room with sliding door to
sundeck, master bedroom ensuite.
Wall-to-wall throughout. Two extra
rooms and R.l.P. in full high base¬
ment. Asking $62,500. For more in¬
formation pleau call:
E. WILKINSON or 0. DOUGLAS
382-4251 (anytime)
Nearly 2 acru of good land,
hu excellent possibilities for
the growing Northridge area.
Large spacious, ISOO sq ft.
home of 4 bedrooms with new
stucco, good insulation, wiring,
ots. Good born, fruit trus and
vegetable garden, nearby
creek. Clou to bus, schools
and shops. Priced at $89,500.
ML 18708.
STAN WINTERBOTTOM
385-3435 598-2253
UNIVERSITY AREA
You Will love this spacious
homa of over 1850 sq. ft. on
the main floor. A gracious liv¬
ing room 15.5x20 luds Into
11x13 dlnifb) room that looks
out onto a delightful gardu
aru. The kitchen Is family
size and fully urviced. A sunny
2 room studio with Its own
private entrance will thrill the
artistic or provide ideal space
for houu guuts. The half acre
property Is fully landscape
and provldu you with priVsy
that Indudu a number of fnjft
treu and a kitchen garden
aru. This property Is on a
short quiet lane nur the uni¬
versity In a most duiroble
aree. Good value at an asking
price of $ 116 , 000 .
K. 0. AtoORE
385-3435 — anytlmt
HOMES
HOLDING
DEVELOPMENT
3 ediscent properties of 60x100
each fronting on thru struts.
One property has a 4 bedroom
1375 sq. ft. home presently
renting et $245.00. The other
has a 1 B.R. 1695 SQ. ft. home
that rents for $125.00 end a 3
B.R. 1025 sq. ft. home that
rents at $ 200.00 at an asking
price of $4UOO and $38X100 ei¬
ther or both has a potential for
providing good living at low
cut ano-or at lust over 6.50
sq. foot. A good holdlng-
d^lopment property. Discuss
it with me now.
K. 0. MOORE
385-3435 — anytime
RENTAL WITH
LARGE LOT
Large, solid building, clou In.
Great rental potential. 3
1'B.R., 2 bachelor and 1 sleep¬
ing room. 3 meters. AM units
furnished except owners, which
has beamed celling and fire¬
place. Large entry with open
stairway. First time offered in
over 20 years. Ctur title. Also
includu an extra lot with up.
garage. Don't miss this oppor¬
tunity, $80,200.
ROY ANDERSON
315-3435 4n-5057
Byron Price
and Associates Ltd.
•04 BROUGHTON ST. 385-2458
A REAL ZINGER
$41,000
This lovely stucco bungalow with
baument ftatures a large living
room with fireplace big bed¬
room and kitchen with utlng aru
— landscaped lot 50x133. Freshly
decorated and ready to move In.
Won't last •— su this now! Kay
Davlu or Gladyce McLuro
385-2458.
Retirement Home
Idul two-bedroom honte In spot¬
less condition — like new. Larger
than average lot. A good buy. Low
taxes. About 8 miles from town,
$45,000. Don Bacon, 385-2458.
In the Laurels
Bungalow
with Suite —
>,500
$59,
In beautiful seclusion behind •
lovely laurel hedge there Is a mod¬
ern rench-atyled bungalow with
double garage. Two bedrooms, din¬
ing room, largo living room with
unique Nre^ace PLUS full ba^
ment with LEGAL suite — living
room with firoploce — seporato
entrance presently rented at
$175.00 p.m. Central Location. An
ideal situation to help pey for •
lovely home. Su this now with
GLADYCE AAcLURE, 385-24S8.
POPULAR
Simpsons-Sears
$49,900
From the lovely family room vrifh
sliding glau doors overlooking the
beck garden to the aHractlve In¬
side shutter fittings on the win¬
dows, this Is a cottage for the con¬
noisseur. Two-bedreom eccommo-
dotion, ell rooms spacious and at¬
tractive.
QUICK
POSSESSION!
Superb modern accommodation lo¬
cated In Colwood Lake Estatu.
Thru bedrooms, 1>.b baths. Full
high baument ready for develoo¬
ment. Only $60,400. Owner Is rudv
to move.
Call Mrs. Ryan
385-2458 (anytime) 479-1195 (res.)
DRASTICALLY REDUCED
OPEN HOUSE
SAT and SUN. 1:00 to 5:00 P.m.
1334 Justine Place, 4Vb yur old
home on cul-cM-sac, '/i acre, usv
cart lot, backing on park land,
soperate diningroom with sliding
door to dock, large livlngroom
with firtplact oen or 4th bedroom.
In-law suit# with firoplaco and ap-
pliancos. 9 mllu from city on bus
route. $99,000 by owner. To view
call 478-0656.
$48,500
Gorge, 2 b^iroom home.
Electric heat, fireplace,
garage and worieshop.
479-6347.
SHELBOURNE-BAY STREET
aru. Older 2 or 3 bedroom home
on 50x115 foot lot, 0 real han¬
dyman's special, could be used for
rental. $33,900 cash. 383-6223.
HOVSLS l•'OR SAU;:
■lAL' l^i^l
mNC«PM.pmrEimES
4066 SHELBOimNE
477-9614
HOLSLS FOB SALE
MTATi
PfUNCIPALraOPEIITIES
-40<< SHELBOURNE
477-9514
PARKLIKE
GROUNDS
Spectacular Home
On a cul de sac
Near schools and
Transportation
What a location!
What 0 home!
Excellent purchase!
$68,500
For more information
on aliove properties
PLEASE CONTACT
W. 6. MOORE
479-3331
DESPERATION
SALE
Central Saanich
$62,300
This home must be sold, and
the Vendor is wiiling to look
at any and all offers. This
no basement home has 1300
sq. ft. with 3 bdrms. l*j
baths, living and dining
room, large Idtchen and sep¬
arate laundry room. With
W-W caipeting throughout,
and partial water views
from 3 rooms makes this
purchase a wise investment.
CaU TONY FAULKNER at
477-9514 ANYnME.
PAN AVI EW
HEIGHTS
Central Saanich
ML$ 18616
Situated on a laige
<100.\160) lot and located in
an area of fine homes, this 9
vr. old, 3 bdrm. with fully|
developed basement is'
ready for immediate oc-i
cupancy. With both a family
and rec. room (ccmiplete j
with wet bar and stereo) I
gives this house a total of
1670 sq. ft. of living area. |
Call TONY FAULKNER at
477-9314 ANYTIME.
IMMACULATE
Central Saanich 3 bdrm.:
home with finished fam.
ix)om. and rumpus room
with bar on lower level.
V'ery nicely landscaped one
third acre lot. $69,900. MLS
18616. MEET BEATTY —
r)»2-3446.
LARGE
FAMILY
WANTED
For this completely finished
and remodelled 2 level 4
bdrm. home with 2-4 Piece
bathrooms on a large well
kept lot Langford area,
close to alJ schools, shop¬
ping. etc. P'or <nly $56,900.
MLS 19139. MERT BEATTY.
.■>92-3446 OR BOB GEDDES
477-9514.
NEW
Five new homes with l‘.i
batlis, built-in dishw*asher
and vacutim systems. Taine
Place off Saanich Rd. Drive
by and call me for appoint¬
ment to view inside. MEET
BEATTY. 592-3446 or BOB
GEDDES 4n-9514.
WATER¬
FRONT
JUST
REDUCED
MUST SELL ! !
Now^s your opportunity to
:<elect your dream house on
the waterfront! \ of an
acn; treed seclusion and
privacy. English Pub in
lower area, plus 4 bedroom.s
3 bathrooms, plus so much
more to excite and delight,
the whole family. Asking:
only $138,000. Appointments
to view a must. Call GOR-'
DON B. MACDONALD, at
477-9514 or 883-2889.
KIDS
PARADISE
Want a home with trees and
rocks and hills to climb and
explore, yet still be close to
towTi. Well lake a Io(^ at
this! Over acres - 2000
sq. ft. 4 bedrooms, plus a
den! 9 yrs. young. lO’-aTr
mortgage. Yes. it's got a
I’ec. room too!
ONLY $87,500
WOW!
CAIX ME NOW 477-9514 or
383-2889 CKtRDON B. MAC¬
DONALD
P.S. It’s got an "A” frame
playhouse
CENTRAL
SAANICH
NEW LISTING
$79,900
lAicated within easy driving
distance of Sidney, Brent¬
wood. and Victoria, this im¬
maculate home, with its 3
bedrooms, 2 baths and fully
developed basement is now
available for wise pur¬
chaser. Built in 1962, on a
subdivision potmtial. with
cedar siding and Duroid
roof, this house was built for
the family with comfort in
mind. CAU> TONY
FAULKNE3R at 477-9514 AN¬
YTIME.
BRAG!
Tell your friends about how
you got his place for a song!
Oh yes! It's a good buy in a
great are* — 3 bedrooms up
plus 2 down, separate dining
room, plus a rec. room too,
large lot in choice area. Va¬
cant! Move in for back to
school. Only $59,859.
GORDON B. MACDONAID
477-9614 OR 383-2889
NEW LISTING
■BRENTWOOD
$82,900
Aie you looking for that
lai*ge family home? Or do
you need a home with poten¬
tial revenue? Call me re-,
garding this brand new
home w'itli a total of 2,357
sq. ft. With its aluminum
and stucco exterior. 3
bathrooms, 5 bedrooms. 2
kitchwis, 200-amp. service
and a good assumable mort¬
gage. this home could be
the home for you. CALL
TONY FAULKNER at
477-8514 anytime.
BESTBUY'
. STRATA HOME
$57,500
Reduced to clear Oak
Bay Rockland Area. Just
immaculate 2 bedroom con¬
dominium. Extra large
rooms. Deluxe kitchen with
dishwasher. Ensuite in large
master bedroom, lots of
storage, plus a carport. Ex¬
clusive with CENTURY 21
Principal Properties Ltd.
aOPUX)N B. MACDONALD
477-9514 or 383-2889.
NEW HOME
BRENTWOOD
$65,500
TTus home w'ill be ready for
occupancy very soon, l^ocat-
ed widiin walking distance
of Brentwood, this home has
4 bpdrooms, 3 bathrooms,
living room (with floor-to-
ceiling fireplace), dining
room and large kitchen.
Phone mw for af»fX)intment
to view. CAU. TONY
FAULKNER at 477-95M
ANYTIME.
COLWOQD
CUTIE
. Near new. 4 bdrms.
i — Charming Portuguese
.stonework.
•Lov'ely landscaping.
Absolutely immaculate.
MLS. $64,000, ROSS or
MARION 477-9314. 652-2736,
388-6275. Pager 2813.
FINNERTY COVE
AREA
Lovely beam show home on
12,000 ft. mature landscaped
lot. Well treed. Close beach
access. 4 bdnn. 3 baths,
den. MLS $88,500. Ross
Butler. Marion Lund.
477-9514 . 652-2736. 388-6275.
Page 2813.
Best Buy
Gordon Head
Why? Because the brand
ne%v 1,400 ft. custom home is
offered at a similar price to
.«ame smaller lesser home.s.
The builder is a custom, not
a spec builder, and has in¬
cluded thermopane glass,
large, formal dining rm.
.Shower in en suite, bidet,
and more. $78,900. Ross or
Marion 477-9514 . 652-2736,
388-6275. Page 28U.
1558 Richardson
New Tudor
Tills very elegant easy liv¬
ing home is the ultimate in
gracious living. Huge mst.
bedrm-dressing rm-bathrm
suite. Den, separate dining
rm. All built-ins in kitchen.
MX^. Must sell. $99,900.
Ross or Bob Geddes
477-9514, 388-6275. Page 2813.
258 HOUSES FOR SALE
montrea!
Tmst^
(X)RDON HEAD '
CUL DE SAC
/Fully d«v«lop«d S-6.R. HOME
ON LARGE LANDSCAPED
LOT. Liv. reom and r*c. room
both with fplacos. Family-tUt
kitchon. 5 B.R.s. den. Double
cerport with deck over lots of
oeved parkins for boei or
trellor, etc. Shake roof. Over
2,600 so. tt. of good quellty
development. A real tern, size
home in an excellent area.
MLS 17440. Offarad at S96,500.
306-2111 MIKE MCKENNA 592-3611
CHARMING CADBORO
BAY
RtSIDENCB
wa are pleased to offer for
sale this charming home that
has given so much pleasure to
the preserft owners for many
years. Walt located close to
Uplands Golf with pleasant saia
glimpses of the bay and fea¬
turing a vary well arrenoed
Hv. room with fireolace, book¬
shelves and a delightful bay
window. A cozy den also with
Iplaca and spacious din. room
with tulll-ln cupboards lust
perfect lor formof enterlilnlng.
There are three good she
BJ^.s end 2 baths. Lots of
aHic storage end a dean dry
basement for your workshop or
additional develooment.
Garages for 3 cars and un¬
derground sprinkler to else
your gardening chores. Cer¬
tainty a home of great warr*th
and, character In a splendid
l^atlqn and offered at $96,000.
MLS 11763.
306-2111 MIKE MCKENNA 502-3611
OPEN HOUSE
4031 LOYCttJV
MON. THROUGH SAT.
1;(XM;00
258 HOt^ia FOB »ALB
SINCi 1187
dtolniM
£u
290 HOUSES FOR SALE
3-B.R. split-level home in Cen¬
tral Gordon Head. Close to all
levels of schools, this home
features a family room off the
kitchen, e hobhy room and a
games room. Attractivalv de¬
corated throu«hnut by a local
well-known artist, this home Is
available for your inspection
anytime.
MURRAY or JEANNE LUCAS
366-2111 477-1342
NEW USTINCf
$•19,900
Absolute gem located with a
view of park and valley, near
Colt course and shopping; no-
throufh sfraet. Cozy Uv. room,
fplace, din. area. 2 B.R.s, plus,
/nt property is terraced and
shrubbed a real honey tor
the gardener. Exctlleni retire¬
ment or starter. Exclusive
with:
316-2111 0. BECKNER 477-4204
UPLANDS GOLF
WHITE COLONIAL ,
SWIMMING POOL
PRICE $169,500
Supercalltragllisfic — Ex-
pieledocious, difficult finding
words that will adequaialy de-;
scribe the msny extra fine fea-|
lures lo be found in this stately i
white colonial 2-storay residence.
—21.6x14.7 seoerate LR with mar-1
bie faced fireptecc, fitted screen
and matching accessories.
.—Guest sized fvmal OR 13.8x12.
Main floor FR 24x33 2nd FP
Includes Wllisrd table, a delight-
tul and most used room In the
home.
—2-plece powder room of# 2lx?
front entrance.
—Nicely situated den or study withi
sliding doors laiading to rear ger-,
den dock.
—2nci floor features t large bed¬
rooms plus full 4 piece main
bathroom. Mastar BR has own
3-Pce. with shower stall, ada-
quatc closets and storage area.
—Full 2<ar enclostd garage. Plus
garden house to rear of this
besutltuHv treed lot.
—36'x27' screened and filtared
pool, oodles of patio and sunny
exposura. ML 18655, owners have
purchased, maybe vour opportu¬
nity. For extra detail or for
prlvata vltwiM. please call;
C. A. CLIFT ANDERSON
3644124 477-3994
366-6275 Pagar No. 2343
QUADRA-KINGS
2-B.R. BUNGALOW
ONLY $49,500
A tarrlflc ratlramant or starter
home. In beautiful condition insidt
and out. Nawfy paintad Kenatex
extarlor, nicely treed and land¬
scaped, good garden. Note large
garage end workshop.
—Home features Sanwood updated
I7.9x9.t. kitchen Includes a good
sized dining area.
—15x14 living roon% oak floors and
natural fireplace
—Situated near to shops and bus
line.
—Hurry en this one. New MLS
16975. Early occupancy. Pieaia
C. A. CLIFF ANDERSON
3644124 or Ras.; 477-3994
PAGER: 366-627S-3342
WMTTOMES
OAK BAY BORDER
JUBILEE AREA
A modern home on smell casy-
care lot. Three BRs. 2 full
Ibethroemi, rec. room and sawing
I room. Career over oak In LR, DR
and hall. A real bargain at $56,500.
HOUSE and 2 AC.
Peace and quiet on a natural
wooded tot at north and of Pros-!
pact Lake, plus e comlortable 1090
sq. ft. house that Is tree of worries
ts II was rebulll 6 veers ago with
modern oil hot air heating, copper'
, Piping, modern wiring, full Insula¬
tion. This Is a rare combination at'
I price of 672,900. Early occupancy,
I courtesy to realtors.
BRENTWOOD ,
Wsverlev Tee. Is e quiet creKcnl ;
of better homes and underground
wiring which starts at Vardier and
ends at north end of Hetan. The
home is e 3 BR. P/> bath split >
tayei ll'/t yr.) with 1600 sq. ft.,
finlihad fnciudlng a ground level
rec. room and high bdeement tor;
further development. Immeculefe
condition. Attractive rear garden. 1
Early occupancy. ML 17752. Price:
666,000.
willlt! uLPlmust ViuUu'u. £.C., Monday, Au^uai '£i, Uio ^
IlOLSES FOB SALE 83» HOL'SES FOB SAI.E l -M HOUSES FOB SALE
WESTMONT
REALTY LTD.
920 HILLSIDE
386-6796
BIG LOT
BIG POTENTIAL
BIG HOUSE — 1400 SQ. ft. — 3
bedrpomt — tuit basement —
mountain view ^ ocean vlaw —
oood soil — city water — welt —
AN EXCELLENT BUY In the
country — cIom in el onlv $63,000.
fAAKE OFFERS — Owner may
carry some. Call Ken Jensen
386-3494 — 592-9079.
OCEAN VIEW
TERRIFIC BUY
OAK BAY SOUTH
ENJOY A PANORAMIC VIEW of
the OCEAN from the LIVING
ROOM window or STROLL TO
THE BEACH 900 ft. iwiy from
this ROOMY 2-bedroom no-step
home. Excellent LR with FP and
OR off. Lge family kitchen, iqe
mastar BR with ensuite off 2nd
BR, plus 4-oce bath. Surplus clos¬
ets end cupboards throughout tha
home. Easy. attractive lot.
Garage, oil-<hmatk heat. BIG dble
carpori.
UNBELIEVABLE LISTED PRICE
as OWNERS art moving. Call Kan
Jensen, 316-3494 — 592-9079.
NEWLY LISTED
OPEN HOUSE
313 FOUL tAY KOAD
Sat. 1:30-4:00 p.m.
This S BR, 3-bathroom, 2-yaar<ld
contemoerarv sea vlaw homa
faaturas 2100 sq. ft. of wall-
planned living. Note the 16.6x10.6
anirence. 21x16 F.R. end the 2Ad
F.P. Two spacious sundecks
everlookina city. Mountains, with
views to Pen Angeles. Home is
Approx. W block off street. MLS
15299. See you Set. or for prior
Appt. please cell;
Reduced 1124.500
C. A. CLIFF ANDERSON
3844124 or 384-2994
FAIRFIELD
1157 BURDETT
Must be sold, owner moving Sept.
1. This is a terrific preperty, 3
full baths — modern kitchen, 3
BDs—panelled den — deluxe din¬
ing RM. Large living RM with
FP. Fully develops Bsmt..
large Rec. Rm. with Franklin
Stove outlet. Knowledgeebit
buyers will set pessIbHltles in
this prooedy — can be d^el-
oped for revenue — the 6,400 sq.
lot has future Investment poten¬
tial. Many axtras can be Includ¬
ed In sale price — large exiitino
mortgeee can be assumed —
look this one over, make offers
to $75,000.
IAN AAcGREGOR
364-6124 3B4-3I30
$63,900
New home located at 3904 Quadra.
This is axcellent valua and dif¬
ficult to match today, it has axter-
lor of stucco and cadar siding, 12U
M ft. on main. 3 bedrms. (master
ensuite), full high basement, large
sundeck on south side. Attractive
tot with large trees at front and to
raar of housa. Can bt saon any-
tima — FOR THE ABOVE 4 LIST¬
INGS CALL;
479-1667 wilfrad Davla 6S64664
BREATHTAKING
VIEWS
ARE yours from this architectural-
Iv-designed homa high on the
rocks overlooking the ocean and
Islands. Suparior construction plus
unusual layout makes this a must i
to see for the person who wants e i
home that is dlHtrent. Have vour,
morning coffee in the cocy dining i
area off the excellent kitchen ‘
while eniovlng the magnificent
view, or while sitting comfortably
by the Fireplace. ThTs h^e defin¬
itely will not suit the buyer who
wants the ordinary niy tha per¬
son wishing the unusual end the
spectacular. Yes — there Is room
for a family — 3 bdrms. and den
— one 4-pce. bath and two 3-pcs.
Comfortable family room off kitch¬
en opening to wrap around dock.
Priced at 6117,500. TO VIEW
CALL
479-1667 LILLIAN HENDY 479-4936
199 FORT IT.
FANTASTIC VIEW
OPEN HOUSE
SAT. 1:30-4 P.M.
40 KING GEORGE
TERRACE
A truly unique home architectrual-
ly planned lo take full advantage
of the outstanding view of the
Jusn de Fuce Straits and the
Olympics. Master bedroom has 3
pee ensuite and waik-ln closet -> 3
additional bedrooms. Family room
- an outstanding home that must
be seen to be appreciated. Re¬
duced to 6119,500 MLS 18056.
"THE MCGREGORS" 364-8001 or
Res. 477-3675 The Rovel Trust Co.
645.000
This Victorian home has bten tas¬
tefully restored throughout to ore-
serve old teshioned elegance with
refinlshcd wood floors, silk
screened wall paper and panelling
in the spacipus hallway, parlor
and dining room, old fashioned
decor of kitchen arKi pantry has
been preserved while many modern
conveniences have been added,
such ae new floors, stainless steel
sink end counters (stove end
fridge included), 3 bedrooms on
second floor have been freshly
painted end carpeted, large ireed
lo). full basement and garage, new
wlrmg. cooper plumbing end fur¬
nace make this old stylo home
sound and comtorteble. Private
sale. Please call 365-5372 or
383-9607 . 666 Bellon Ave.
$55,900
3-bdrm. rancher, in Colwood en
quiet wall-traad streat. House Im¬
maculate inside end out. Yard
fully landscaped end beautifully
groomed. Folly fenced backyard
— Garden shed and drive-ln
garage. Only I yri. old, and priced
to sell. M.L.S.
Bill Wilson
386-3494 (24 hrs.)
HURRY HURRY
Newly listed Colwood gom. 4
borms, 3 up, and 1 down. 3 baths,
all finished rac rm, Mv. rm, din
rm, FP. Grounds immaculate,
shruba and ttowars galore, beck
end front. $59,900,00. ^L.S.
Bill Wilson
386-3494 (24 hrs.)
JUST LISTED!
$49,500!
Very neat two bdrm. bungalow
only W block from Hillside shop¬
ping centre. Grounds have b^n
well meintelned end will delight
the gardener. Back yard is fully
fenced. There is also a large
garage complete with workshop.
Inside of the home features a
cheery Kitchen, e warm Living
Rm. with fireplaca and a utility
room with washar and dryer hook-
^.^Be the first to see it. Call now.
Wayne Rowe
Jock Davis
386-3494 (24 hrs.)
SWEEPING VIEWS
—Landstnd, ’s acre.
—Largt Ranch sfyla homo.
badrooms, 2'/2 baths.
—Family room and den.
—Large living room end dining
room with views.
—Full basement.
—Beach Kcess.
—Bulidar wilting to assist with fi¬
nancing.
—Saliinq price, $ 121000 .
1290 LANOSENO RO.
PHONE 656-5116
Builder will be listing with broker
soon.
1316 Eloulmatt Rd.
ONLY $57,500
and raailv nica, lust 1 | yaars eld.
3 tadrooms, basament, sifuatad on
a crescant near Ml. Tolmia. No
saearate dining room but a most
pleasant eating are« with views.
Modern kitchen with sliding doors
onto sundeck. MLS 11403. Cell
Ruoy Reid. 384-OSIl.
$47,500
tor a very delighlful. no-basameni,
2.badroom stucco bungalow. Haul-
tain-.ook area, handy >o buses and
shops — An excellent choice
whether your "starling'’ or "reflr-
Inq." MLS 17797. Call Ruby Reid,
364-0581.
HAVK YOU 9KEN
1702 Fernwood? The big stalely
white home with the turret. Excep-
lioaeilv impressive interior that
has baen very well malntalnad
with large rooms and winding ban-
istar staircase. Just beautiful. Call
Ruby Reid at 3644)581 for more In¬
formation on this heritaga calibra
home.
COLWOOD. 3.BEDROOM
$53,900!.
Just listed. 5-vear-old, full-
basement with 1V!> baths and sun¬
deck. Level lot Is ripe for your
own development. Quiet no-through
streets beer shops end schools.
Immedlata possession available on
completion of purchase. MLS
19242. C^l C. Eshom to view this
etfrective homL 3*44)511 — act
now. t)>ls Is a bargain.
BY OWNER C0LW<3OD'lAKE~
Bast buy In Cpiwood Lake. Femtiv
heme, 5 bedrooms (3 up, 2 down)
Pius ensuite, lergt living room,
dining room and kitchen, wall to
wall throughout, closa to schools,
shopping and golf coursa, larga as
sumabli mortgage at 9’AS. Priced
$61,900. Cell 47I-I410.
18
FARMER
Ji m mtmmwD
825 Bay Street 382*2134
NEW LISTING
SIDNEY
$59,900 MLS
An Immeculefe two-bedroom home
with protessionetly finished third
down. This home was custom built
and Is in axcaptionglly good condi¬
tion. Fully Isndscmpad and fenced
at roar with a larga yard — 96
feet wide. Drive by this b«euty at
2033 Coursar Orivt and for an
pointmant to vlaw pleasa call;
Jim West
HEART
OF
UPLANDS
A BEAUTIFUL HOME IS A JOY
FOREVERi It Is with plaasure wa
offer for sale this lovely one-
owner, custom built home with an
ovtr-afi living area of naeriy 4,000
sq. H. on two lavals. Beautiful 24
ft. Liv. Rm. — large formal Din.
Rm — stunning kitchen with spe¬
cious separate breektsst area
overlooking the garden. Cozy pan¬
elled Den — 4 Bedrms, 2 4-pce.
colour-toned bathrms plus 2*pca.
balh en suite to Master Bedrm —
3 open firepiecct — 31 ft. enter¬
tainment rm with bar. PLUS an
outdoor 20x35 heated Jacuzzi
swimming pool. Situsted on nearly
’i acre of beeutifullv landscaped
grounds. The ageless boauty of
this horn# — the meliculoos interi¬
or with so many fine appointments
— the suporb construction — adds
UP to one of the bMf investments
on the market today. $162,000. Ex¬
clusive to:
Gerrie Hutton
386-3927
Boyd Sadler
592-1929.
382-2134 (Bus.)
F SOUTH
OAK BAY
Sparklino whita ? Bdrm bungalow ■
on a Quiat straet in Oak Bay. •
I Lovely hig kitchen with Kitchenaid'
dishwasher and garburator, loads
[of cahinets and counter soace.
I Separate Dining Room — full
basement with large bedrm, ex.
plbg, drive In gerege end work-
I shop. Beautiful gerden. in lovely
condition Inside end out. A perfect
'small family or retirement home, ■
Askino $73,600.
Gerrie Hutton
382-2134 or
386-3927 (Res.)
MUXrON tX)LLAR VIEW!
Oak Bay. Aa modem an tiv
morrow, custom built
beauty, apacious where it
counts. 3 bedixtoms. 3
bathrooms. A view to take
your breath away. It's a
.MUST SEE! Newly listed at
$129,000.
SHIRLEY MEYER anytime
384^1 oi* Rei. 478-5288.
The Roy*J Trust Oo.
, $46,500
2 bedro6ms. modern kitchen, large
living room, full basement, copper
piumoing, new wiring, are yours
In this stucco bungalow In tha
Simpsons-Scars, Oaxiands area.
Pavad drivtway leads to backyard
lor boats, trailers, etc.
365-7721 CLIFF SALMONO 477-3626
OAK BAY BORDER
A block Off Foul Bay Rd. in the
Dean Haights araa, you wilt find
all thinos convenlant in this spot-
■us 34>edroom, full Miament
heme. 2 ) years young with hard¬
wood floors, fireplaca and room
tor development in the high base¬
ment. An excellent neighborhood!
A large $46,500 mortaage may be
assumed. Asking S59,m.
365-7771 CLIFF^ALMOND 477-3626
HIGH FAIRFIELD
Luxury living on a ona-third-acra
with a seciudad raar yard. This
4-bidroom larat horn# la immacu¬
late ihroughotn with a 20'xi2' fam¬
ily room on the main floor. A
mutt tae. You will ba dallghted.
Askina $92,500.
365-7721 CLIFF SALMOiND 477-3626
SIDNEY REALTY LTD
Real Estate — Insurance
Serving the Saanirh Peninsula
656-392*
UNIVERSITY
FINNERTY C»VE
ML 16833, walking distance to
University, acre, larte older
home with separete studio.
Take advantaoQ of today's
buyer's market. $1)I4X)0. For
appointment to vlaw this or
similar propertias with no obli-
gatln call;
DAVID SCOTT
.365-3435 595-^6
P. R. BROWN * IONS LTD.
PARKLANDS
BEAUTY.
Saciusion
—ail gardtns malura shrubery
—baautitujiy landacapad
—1M ft. frontage
Home
—neat as a pin
—3-br. no stop
Facilities
—C.P. and 24X16 naw garagt
and workshop
-Loads of storage
—16X12 covered patio
Character
-floor to ceiling corner windows
in L.R.
-Post and Beam Construction
Bonus
—only 157,500. Call me now for
this new exclusive listing.
365 b 7721 Kent Mecleod 595-4273
CRAIGDAR-
ROCH
TUDOR
This beautiful elder heme must be
seen to be apprKleted - consists
of massive L.R. with granite F.P.,
In-IM D.R., modern kitchen with
eetlng area, 1 Wrm. on main and
*. bdrms. and 2 bathrooms up¬
stairs. Leadad windows throughout
and hot water haatlng add to tha
style and charm of this home.
Basement has laundry room,
playroom end lots of storage
room. — $89,000. M.L.S.
GORGEOUS
GORGE
Attractive 3-bdrm., full basement
home, leetures new hardwood
floors fhrouohoui, L.R. with F.P.,
separate D.R. and maple counter
tops In modern kitchen. Good yard
with greenhouse. Priced to ten et
$54,900. MLS.
3*5-7721 DALE BRIGGS 592-3976
p*ri basement, lovely treed
(100x200) with JEA AND MOUN¬
TAIN VIEWS - $41,900. This is
comfortable country livint in the
charming Colwood tree. LOW
LOW TAXES ($210 Grou). Com¬
pact cabinet electric kitchen with
built in range, oven and dishwash¬
er. Large oarage. Storage shed.
Fourteen fruit trees, ideal retir¬
ement or starter, for appointment
to, view cell ROBERT YOUNG
4774749 or GEORGE BLACK
362-2426. MLS. Park Pacific invest-
menfs Ltd. 3*3*4124 anytime.
3400 DOUGLAS ST.
384*8001
TOWN AND COUNTRY
A radacoratad homa with a
2-bedroom In-taw suite down.
LOT 50x212. MLS. OHers Invit¬
ed on $63,500. Please cell BAR¬
BARA LIEBENAU, 3644001 or
Ret. 4794319.
GLEN LAKE AREA
POST AND BEAM
A perfect retirement bungalow
in quiet country atmosphere
lust pKfect for a couple. Well-
10 -weil carpet througnout, din¬
ing rm., compact xltchan, 3
bedrooms, 4-pce. venitv bath, 2
qaragaa, 2 Mtlo*. Porfactly sa-
cijoed backyard on a lovely
tread proporty, 75x1tt. Asking
$54,000. MARGARET JOHN¬
STON, 3644001 or Ras
477-1763.
SIDNEY
$62,500
Only threa yaars old, charming
no-stap home, in-line living and
dinirtg roorn, fireplace, spe¬
cious kitchen, 3 badrooms.
5-Pce. bath. Loti of storage.
PETER TER VEER. 364-8001
ef 479-1566.
MARIGOLD AREA
$57,500
immediafe occuoanev, brand
new home, living room with
Franklin fireplace. dining
room, large sundeck, 3 bed¬
rooms, 4-pce. bath, lull base¬
ment. PETER TER VEER,
3644001 or Res. 479-1516.
GORGE AREA
$54,500
Immediate occuMney on this
brand new home, living room
with fireptace, dining room,
step-saving kitetian, laundry
area, 3 baths and 3 badrooms.,
PETER TEil VEER, 384-10011
or 479-1566.
MAJOR PRICE REDUCTION
1411 HAULTAIN ST.
Ownar anxious — was SS9.000.
now only $50,000. Well-kapt
2-badroom bungalow — 1,722
sq. ft. main floor. Driva-by
then give me e cell to view
anytime. CONNIE REYN¬
OLDS, 3844001 or Res.
477-6914.
FAMILY HOME, $75,900
4-vaar-old. S-bedroom home
walking distanca to tha beach
in Cordova Bay. Attractive
floor plan featuras 2 firtplacas,
2 baths, plus nica basement
development. Additional park¬
ing area. Fancad yard. Own*r
transferrad and must salt.
MLS MERYLE or CHE5
HAYS, 3144001 or Res.
656-5663.
BROADMEAD CONTEMPORARY
A combination of stone, brick,
ceder open beam end glass. 4
badrooms total, tsak cabinetry
throughout, on the high side
and full of sunshine. Now only
$129,000. Call JEANNIE OE-
WHURST. 3844001 or Rae.
477-6040. "The Rcattor Who be-
tlevee In Broadmead."
TRADE UP TO A TUDOR!
4 badrooms, 3 baths, family
and rec. room. Totally unique
on easy-care lot. Anxious
buiidar has lust raducad to
$136,900 and will look at your
present homa or condominium
in trade. Cell JEANNIE DE-
WHURST. "The Realtor Who'
Believes in Broadmead."'
384-8001 or 477-6040.
TREED SECLUSION!
—Now only $115,000 and open lo
offers.
—Immaculata 3-bedroom, 2-level
homa with flnlshod rac. room,
oen and othtr davelopn>eni
area.
—Approx A4-acra In private
sunny location close to Univer¬
sity.
—Quick poseeulon.
JEANNIE DEWHURST.
3644001 or 477-6040.
1 WEST COAST STYLING
,■ —Rustic, Open beamed.
I —3 bedrooms, 2-storev.
I —Master with fireplace
I —Family room plus dan. i
—Landscapad, sprlnklar svsttm.
$173400.
JEANNIE DEWHURST.
3844001 or 3774040.
THE BEST VIEW IN TOWN
—Naw Cedar and Rock Rancher.
—About 4500 sq. tt.
—Master approx. 26x6x12 adiolns
opan beam dan and saparatss
from tha reef of tho 4 bod-
rooms for privacy.
—EasY<ara lot.
—Every conceivable extra
—Beautiful living at $246,000.
MLS.
, JEANNIE DEWHURST.
364-6001 or Res. 477-6040.
TRIANGLE MOUNTAIN
$69,900
High view location and 4 acre
of property. Large living room
with tiraplece. dining area.
large sundeck. spacious kitch.^.
en. 3 badrooms. ivy baths, lulh* suparior ffoor plan fteturli
semi-devalopod b a s a m e n t.
PETER TER VEER, 3644001,
479-1586.
3400 DOUGLAS ST.
'384-80Q1
00 YOU LIKE FAIRFIELD
In Iht trut resldantial area (no
apartments). Older 4-bedroom
bungalow, 2 up, 2 down, 17 It.
living room with F.P. Fine lit¬
tle home. Only $46,900 OAR
GARSIDE. 3844001.
CLOSE TO GORGE VALE
Newly decorated two-bedroom
home with large bright living
room with fireplace, temily
kitchen with good-size dining
area. Full cement basement
with 3 more finished rooms
and toilet. Drive-ln garage cn
nice tot, close to transpor-
j tatlon, schools and Gorge vale
Golf Course. Asking pries
S59.S00. MARK AAACKENZIE,
595-4596 or AL MATTED,
656-5057 or 3644001.
FAIRFIELD, CHARACTER
3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHROOMS
IMMEOfATE POSSESSION
Seavlews from bedrooms', love¬
ly large bright living reom with
fireplace, seoerete dining eree,
speclout kitchen with eating
area. Generous size upstairs
bedrooms. Large sundeck off
kitchen, full cement baspment
with upstairs bedrooms. Large
sundeck off kitchen, full ca*
mant basement with poasibit
fourth bedroom. Minute welk
to ocesn. New MLS. offered at
$69,500. TIM HOSKIN, 3844001
or Res. 5954250.
$42,900
Almost the value of tha land —
zoned duplex, Esquimalt. Over
1,000 sq. ft. tastefully dacoret-
ed, beautNully broadloomM, 2
B.R., D.R„ Cozy retirement or
starter, close to shopping or
bus. Sure is comfy, come end
see for yourself. By appt. any¬
time. SHIRLEY MEYER.
3644001 or Res. 476-5361.
OAK BAY
MODERN, PANORAMIC VIEWS
Views from every room. Luxu¬
ries master bedroom features
a fKtpiaca. balcony, reading
araa and ' 4-pca. bathroom.
Large bright kitchen with eat¬
ing area and laundry. Gracious
dining room and living room,
plus larga den and family
room. A must see with 4 bed¬
rooms, 4 fireplaces end 4
befhrooms. Essy-cere lot. Of¬
fered et $193,000. MLS 11447.
TIM HOSKIN, 3644001 or Res.
5954250.
OAK BAY
WATERVIEWS
GRACIOUS LIVING
THIS exceptional spacious and
wall<ared for home offers
t^uly greclout livine with Its
two spacious bedrooms, two
bathrooms, large view living
room wHh fireplace, cherminq
view den with Rreptac* and,
balcony, separata dining room.
Ideal tor entertaining and a
bright kltchan with Its views
onto the garden. The lower
level features a oenerous size
femlly room with e ground-
level entry. A tine home offer¬
ing elmost no-stao front entry.
Close to Victoria Golf Course.
Ideel tor these leisurely weZks
along the waterfront, A rare
finding offering oood value et
$115,000, MLS. TIM HOSKIN.
3144001 or Res. 995*6250.
DRIVE BY
2450 CAMELOT
Vacant, poesasien Immediate.
Cadboro Bav eree. close to
beach, University and schools. 3
bedrooms on main — 1 down.
Large 60'x165' lot. MLS. Prreed
low at $63,900, b^ bring offers.
To view cell JOHN MORRY,
3644001 or Ras. 9934770.
■CLOSE TO UVIC
Spacious ranehtr — 3 bsd-
rooms, large living room, sap-
arata dining room, family
kltchan and a large utility
room. Living and dining rooms
hsve wall-to-wall carpeting.
Double car garaoa and It la all
situ>sted on an 14x150 lot with
a secluded back yard. MLS
II337. Priced at $74,500.
3664796 KEN WRIGHT 596-2183
NICELY
LANDSCAPED
AND FENCED
This fine 3 bedroom home is
neet end clean throughout. Sit¬
uated in the HIIIsIm Quadra
area this home has a larga liv¬
ing room with a fireplace, a
kitchen with eetlng area, and
in the full basement there is a
recreational room. Situated
within a milt of all school
levels end a tow biKkt from
downtown. Try your offer on
the aiking price of $57,900.
MLS 18541. For further infor¬
mation call;
3664796 ARNOLD MARR 477 4 233
OWNER
TRANSFERRED
An opportuntty for advance¬
ment so the owners must re¬
luctantly offer this Immaculate
6 months old townh^sa for
tala. FeatulMg?-^ badrooms.
I'/j baths, m^rga thOng room,
dining room Xv* hfIm area
In the kitchenVTfatlo anoXsf-
port. There is a Wee exlttlog
mortoeoe. An exUlient velT*
et $53,9M. Phone for an a
pointmant. MLS 19161 '
3664796 JOHN BUNYAN 383-77
NEW LISTING
Would you not like tho use
of a swimming pool, swiripooi,
sauna, bllliaro room, loungt,
tennis court? All this plus
spotless spacious 2 bedroom
corner suite in a modern 1
year old condominium. Best of
all it has baen prlcad for
quick sale at $44,900. MLS
19191
3164796 JOHN BUNYAN 313-7777
SOUTH FAIRFIELD
This delightful home has a
K l situation 2 blocks from
Rd. besch. not far from
town and schools all within
walking distance. Almost 3
veer* old this horn* has 4 bed¬
rooms, 2 full bathrooms, living
room with a fireplaca, larga
dining room, a fully davatoped
basament with a boautlfui rec.
room. Outside there Is a beau¬
tiful garden which compares
with Butcherti Gardens. All
this and priced at $87,900. MLS
*ur^r cMtalts call
"“'URr —
nil BLANSHARO
ROSELLE JACKSON
3II427I 596-1093
JACK SWANSTON
3164271 592 4338
PRESENT
OAK BAY
SCHOOL DAZE?
Solve your proOtamsI Buy this 4
bedrm, 2 bathrm gracious family
home, situated close to ALL
GRADES of Khool, in most desira¬
ble area. Asking $67,500. Offers In¬
vited.
JUST LISTED
ROCKLAND AREA
3 BEDROOMS
Immaculate 17 yr old, well built
tzungalow with 1570 sq ft on mem
floor. Oownetairs a spacloua rac
room with l-olact and wal bar.
Nestled on a lovely lendKaped lot
In a secluded cui*de-sac. Close to
ell amenities end hospitals, ic'eai
for the profesaional man. Aaklng
$92,500. Exclusive.
QUIET and SERENE
2 BEDROOMS
REYNOLDS RD.
Located on e large, rocky, easily
maintained lot, this lovely home
often llv-foom with f-place, large
tunny kitchen with sep din-erex
Wall to wall througho^. Orlva-ln
- Asklpg $61,000 but otters
17477, For furl..,,
386-67M ARNOLD MA^R 4774233
$52,900
PEACE
CONTENTMENT
HAPPINESS
ALL ARE HERE IN THIS HOME.
2 BEDROOMS, NICE SIZED
^ LIVING ROOM 13x16 WITH
FIREPLACE, ROSES, SHRUBS.
TREES AND GARDEN
VIEW BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
387-3666 KEITH BRAID 316-4371
382-5211 JOE MANTON 3814271
MAJESTIC DRIVE
$76,900
IN-LAW SiJITE
A put
SSQ
STEWART CLARK LTD-
In merger with
JOHNSTON * CO. LTa
1316 BLANSHARO 315-2461
Modern Starter
Only $54,900
Immaculate starter or rttlrtmenf.
(3ood size living room, tireplece,
dining room, two twin site bed¬
rooms, gleaming oak floors. Full
high basament. Larga beautifully
finished rec room, workshop.
Large fenced lot, veg gerden. fruit
trees, roses, shruba and shad#
trees.
MRS. WEBB
Res. 477-3095 Off. 3IS-246I
North Oak Bay
4 Beds, 21/2 Baths
Privote $92,500
DEEP COVE
SECLUDED
This fine home is situated
on a 85x297 foot lot. Thera are
3 bedrooms, 2 futi bathrooms,
a lovely living room with a
fireplaca, dining room, and a
full basamgnt. Tha peace¬
fulness and seclusion is well
imL ^ ^*83,900. MLS
3164796 JOHN BUNYAN 383-7777
- ONLY ONE LEFT
QUIET SETTING
Spacious 3 btdroom fud base¬
ment, muter bedroom has en*
suite, larga living room, dining
wm In line plus fireplace, sun-
deck, all sat for a third
bathroom down plus a bM-
room and a rac area with a
fireptace. Situated on a quiet
cul da^see In a perk-llka set¬
ting^ MU 17578. Prked at
316-67*6 KEN WRIGHT 591-3183
hu living room, kitchen, bedroom
and bath, PLUS utility room and 1
undeveloped room. Fully land¬
scaped grounds offer young or
chard and a fenced backyard. Call
tor appointment to view.
3884271 KEITH BRAID 382-3866
Unique-Charming
Outstanding custom-built post and
beam situatad on .55 acre with
lovely view. The quality is obvi¬
ous, attention to every detail is
avldencM, main floor windows
dbit. olazfd-sertens. Lovely living
rm. feature bricli well jnd F.P.
Delightful kitchen, 2 baths, 2 plus
1 bdrms^ 29x15 rac. rm., area
with F.P. Quiet rural aatting,
$64,500. ML 16613.
366-4371 Ruth Lukaitia 477-5306
366-4371 Shirley Wilde 476-2459
SIMPSONS AREA
Starter or retirement home. 2-bed¬
room, nice living room with fire-
piece, wail-to-we1l throughout ex¬
cept large kitchen. Utility room
end drive-in gerege with loeds cf
sforege. In good area. Asking
$44,500. Call 381-4271 enytima or
595-3154.
I. G. LIDSTONE
J. H. WHITTO*AE and CO. LTD.
COLWOOD
WATERFRONT HOME
For sale by owner. Almost nsw 5
rooms with S-room In-law suite on
lower level with separate enfrence.
Well-to-wail carpet en both levels.
3 outdoor tundocks. double cerport
and additional parking, sraen-
house, down 5 steps to sandy
beach. Unrestricted view of Ced-
boro Bay and Juan de Fuce Strait
from both lavals. Beautlfuliv t'oed
lot ensuras privacy. Price Includes
2 stoves, 2 fridges, end dishwash¬
er. For appointment to view call
477-2022.
CENTRAL SAANICH, CUSTOM
built 1300 square foot, 3-badroom.
fourth down, partially finished
'basament, larga assumabla mort-
| 0 a*e. $M,900 . 653-3796
LAKE HILL AREA I
$49,900
.5 of an acre and easy 3-bad-1
room home. Lovely I'ving
room with slate fireplace, spa -1
cious kltchan, sep. gerege.'
PETER TER VEER. 364-M)r
or Rea. 479-1516.
HIGH ESQUIMALT
$79,500
Ideal femlly home in a perfect
location, some fine features,-
larga living room with hre-i
place, nica spacious kitchen, |
bla dining room, 9 fuil-tize
bedrooms, 4-pce. beth. a full
bestmeni, extra bath, partly
developed basement. Large let.
Sundeck. patio and lots of
oarking. Call PETER TER
VEER, 3144001 or Res.
479-15*6.
CLOSE TO PARKS
Schools snd city centre on im-
maculete home on this quiei
street. 1400 iq. ft., 3-bedroom,
extra large living room. Tas-
felully flKorated and the
grounds are lust like e bowling
green, Extraordinary lovely
roses end a fully fenced yard
end full cement basement.
Price onlv $51,900. 314-iOOt,
BUD ZUCK, 598-7215.
TOWN AND COUNTRY AREA
Immaculate 3-8R. and a well-
built guest room In a full base¬
ment with drlve-ln earage.
lovely largt easy to keep up
yard. Ideal for starter or .re¬
tirement. Make en offK on the
price of $53.m. MLS. 3t44001,
• UD ZUCK, 590-7315.
SEAVIEW! TUDORI
—4 fireplaces.
—4 bathrooms. 4 bedrooms.
—Fantastic kltchan with more
cupboards snd counter than
you've ever seen.
—Plus a separata suite presently
used as builder office.
—6)50,000 and exclusive with
J N I E DEWHURST,
3644001 or Res. 4774040. '
BUY IT NOWI
It will cost much more next
veer. Trade up from your
present home to this distinc¬
tive new beauty on a quiet
treed cul de sec. 3 B.R.s. 2
battle on main with great po¬
tential for lower level with 2n
fireptace. 4th B.R., 3rd bath,
large rec. room reughed-in.
Don't be sorry, see It today
and make your offer on
$83,900. SHIRLEY MEYER.
3844001 or Res. 471-5266 6ny-
time.
TEN MILE POIN'.
Almost an acre of quiet
country living, 3-B.R., 2-beth
bungalow, complataly devel-
;oped on 2 levels. Lower level,
family room or studio, ^x20.
Viewing or further infotlrietlon
SHIRLEY MEYER, 364-8001 or
Res. 476-5368 enytime.
8 ak bay
ARDENER'S DELIGHT
UPLANDS BORDER
ifrimacul6te s-bedroom home
with 2 bathrooms. Lovely terge
living room with fireplace,
specious dining room, genofoui
.size rec. room. Beeirttfullv
landaceped lot 90x148. Tarrlflc
backyard, fancad, with truH
treat and patio oft kitchen
with eating *r*a. Ntw MLS. A
vary Inttresting prepay
priced to tell at $67,500. tim
HOSKIN, $644001 or Res.
5954280.
-. - . Inq:
14</}x16'/> family room, 23x15 LR.
dining room, custom kitchen with
dining nook and access to enter¬
tainment sl*a sundeck and selcud-
ed backyard. Beautiful quality
decor throughout. Closa tg UVIc on
quiat cut-de-sac. MLS 19)76.
SID CUSTANCE
3l5-3al 598-7781
Sauth Oak Bay
Mount Joy Area
Gardener's Delight
A three bedroom, full basement
(amiiy home feeturing: hardwcod
floors, large kitchen with laundry
area, large rec room with fire-
piece. .Workshop eree. Drive-in
gerege and exterior Kenitexed. In
the back of the private 63x190 let
is your own green house end dou¬
ble metal storage sh^. Truly
beautiful Askino $66,500.
SID CuStANCE
365-346I S9I-77II
Sea Views
S,500
Stldom can you find a waii-bullt,
compact 3-badroom. full-bas*ment
bungalow en a genarous lot for
this price. A nice quiet erea over¬
looking Eaquimatt Lagoon wtth a
specious dock to cepturt the view.
Just lilted. H^y terms.
KEN WALTERS 315-3461
$56;
13 CENTENNIAL SQ. 38547*4
quality CONDOMINIUM
New ML. Spacious 3 badrms., liv-
inq end dinina room with woed-
burnlnq F.P. Attroctiv# kitchen
with E.A. Reedv to go. $46,900.
Mery McGuire Donna VgtlkMkl
479-7666 365-1784 24 hri.
$44,900
Atiractiva and clean 2-badroom
cottage In Eaqulmelt. W-to-W in
living room, bright kitchm with
fridge and stove Included 6(w120 let
— low taxes, urgent sale required.
N. OAK BAY
FIVE BEDROOMS
Early possaMien (s possible on this
modern bungalow situatad within
easy walking distanca of UVIc ar^
Camosun Collage. Bright spacloua
rooms. Secluded location among
tall mature oak trees. Asking
$97,500 AND OPEN TO OFFERS.
Drive by 3355 Gibb* Road. Ap¬
pointments ere necessary. Please
call JOHN SHAVER. 3U478i.
WATERFROMT. NEAR Vb*ACRE
on Roblnaon Lake (Courtenay)
iretd (or privacy, ideal for racrea-
^ rasid^tial sift. Aakinq
$)4J>00; try your terms. Cell Ed
St. John evii. 468-7235 or Nanaimo
Raalfv Co. Ltd., Parksviila Branch
2484167.
2199 LANSDOWNE
AT HENDERSON
3na of tha tlnast sites In Oak Bay.
Large 3-bedro*m heme In a pres-
tigeout loeatton. Aaklng $110,000.
pW 112-74^2005,
A vary nice three bed¬
room full high basement homa
In a aatting of lovely wall scat-
Urad fir and arbutus trees.
There Is a fourth bedroom or
oen finished In the basement
as well as a three place
bathroom. Tha vand^s art
very anxious to sell so view it
and, make your offer on the.
eskine price of $63,500. I
MLS 16260. For mor# informe-,
t^ cell:
366-6754 DAVE TAYLOR 814-2716
DESIRABLE AREA
QUIET CUL DE SAC
This well-kept home Is situsted
In the fast growing area of
Gordon Hoad. The home con¬
tains 3 grooms. Hying room
wHh a fireplaca, dining room,
and a rac. reom In ^ full
basement. Priced to be sold at
Ul.fOO. MLS 17716. For more
Information:
3664796 JOHN BUNYAN 313-7777
GORDON HEAD
87,900
Wa have lust Hated this quality
constructed 2-vaar-old home on
a quiet cul4e-tac. There are 4
bedrooms, 2Vi bathrooms,
larga living room, separate
dining ropm, easy to maintain
kitchen, rac. room and family
room with a fireplace. The
mjHn floor has approximately
1400 sq. ft. and there Is • fur¬
ther 1300 sq. ft. finishad In the
full-height besement. Priced to
sell et 167,900. MLS. For an
appoinimant to view contact:
3*64796 477-9394
COBBLE HILL
Locatad In Mill Bay, the
owners built this beautiful
Tudor hof^ with loving care,
planning to llvt there itie rest
of their lives. Hovrtver, fste
hu mtarvened snd It Is now
oHered for sate at tha sacrifict
price of $99,500. There is over
2700 square fut et finished tiv-
inq area Including family
room, dan, four badrooms,
three bathrooms, very large
kltchan, dining room and living
room. Sitautad on 2 plus Kras
of land, there ere other build¬
ings including a 2500 iquara
tool cement block structure
sultsbie for a variatv of pur-
Msu, Including mushroom
farming. To view this out-
standing properly cell:
36647Ht DAVE TAYLOR 3*4-2716
IP PACE
Profits Ltd.
Oak lay Ava. 5 , 5.2413
HANDYMAN —
FAIftFIELD
3-badroom bungalow near Govt.
Houm. Full high bese^nt with
some finishine. Stove, fridge,
)visher, dryer end some drepes
included. VKant and Immediate
possesslOA H desired. 472 Kipling
Street. Price lust reduced $5,000 to
$49,900. MLS 11133.
595-3413 Jerry Oewntr 363-3665
3644075 • Pager 364
595-3413 Brian Higgins 592-2971
OPEN HOUSE
921 Stelly's Crou Road. Brentwood
Bay. Saturday and Sunday, 14
p.m. Ntw 3 bedroom, ensuite. full
besement. Feeturine ceder open
beam ctitint throughout, largt
lendKaped lot. Reefiy e quality
home. Full price only $63,900.
6564297 or 656-1451.
SEABOARD
PROPERTIES LTD.
7I73WRSTSAAMCR RO.
BRENTWOOD BAY lU-lUl
.369 KNUTE wa
WOOD. Lecatid on
through Street, close to elementery
uhooT and Shopping. This 3-bod-
room, iv^ bath horn* on 90 ft. wide
lot is only thru years old. L-
shaped living end dining room
with wood panelled wall and atone
fireplace. Kitchen has lots of cus¬
tom built edPboerds, dining eree
end patio doer leading to sundeck
over carport. Downstairs has
rogghad-ln activity room (Rl fire¬
place) end three other rooms and
plumbing for half bath. Rear
VKd Is partially fenced with gar¬
den a,rea and separata play area
^ children. Priced et $64,900 with
financing avaltabla.
652-1141 FRANK CSINOS 652-5521
. SAANICH-843,900
I 910 LAVENDER
[Older 2-bedroom home In quiet
aru — flreplKe, partial base-
.ment. Nur Spectrum School.
Could be low down payment to
qualified purchaser.
j653-1141 FRANK CSINOS 6S3-552*
CADBORO
BAY
$79,900 firm. By
owner. Private foot¬
path to sandy beach.
Some seaview. Dead¬
end street. Walking
distance to schools,
shops, etc. 1,600 sq.
ft. non-step rancher.
Large new family
room. Lot 75'xl25'.
Serious enquiries
only.
477-5807
PRICE REDUCED
Three bedroom family hem# —
1400 sq.. ft. on one floor, living
room with, fireolace, dining room,
taree kltchan, full basament, com¬
pletely redecorated — vKent.
must be aold. Price 851,500 —
terms. MLS — 271 Superior St. See
this home Friday or Saturday af-
BY BUILDER
Charming 2-badroem Tudor house
off Glantord. Large lot adiolnlnq
park lands. ^ this ona.aeriy and
wa will finish the buement to
your dwires. PerfKtIon Contract-
Ing Company Ltd., 477-9695.
South Oak Bay
» — ST. PATRICK
2,500 SQ. ft. of comtortabla, spa¬
cious living. 6-bedroom family
home, living room, formal dining
room, large kitchen.
tethrpomi, den, guegt for 2 cert
In^ baumanf. Sale by ownar.
BY owner! well buIlt
honrta In Gordon Head. 3 bad-
rums; office, targe bright kitchen,
v/lth fridge, eteve and dishwasher,
targe full baaement, amongst nice
homes on quiet strut, 1690 Sheri-
dan Ave., 477-5530 Asking mjoc.
. C. N. MONTAGUE CO. LTD
sain (^MMltatlon, Rantala 1021
Blanahard Sf. 3864311
S BEDROOMS, FINISHED BASE-
mant, landscaped, orchard, car¬
port. closa to Kheols. Prlvata sale.
No agents. 47l-39lf.
Colonidr Vicuuna, B.c. Sunday, August 22, 1976
'IM HOtSES FOR SALE |''JtO HOl'SES FOR SALK (ISO ROUSES FOB SALE
OrMs
■IXT
21
ATI
J. I. nSOET LTI.
120 * 727 JOHNSON 3e6>312«
TATTERSAL
$54,500
Only t year old. ION m. H., 2
Badrooms. In lint iivin« and din¬
ing room. Locatod on a quit!
straat. W-W carpal. Firaplaca.
S u n d a c k , Vogatabla oardan.
Ownars moving to tna inlarior.
Early ooiaassion. ML 18IN
HOUSES FOB SAI.K
4082 SHELBOURNE ST.
477^)191
TOWNHOUSE
3 BEDROOMS
REDUCED TO
$N.900
Thit quality homa is daslonad
for family living. Ona-lhird
acra. Economic tiaat, thar-
mopana windows, quality wall*
to*wall. Garaqt. Low taxas,
low down payment. MLS 17095.
Call:
Abaolutaty tha graatast value for 4774191 HEIOE WHITE a52*1l20
family living, possession Saot. 1. Hal
Bathrooms. Spacious Living and
dining room. Deluxe carpet | STRIPED AWNINGS
throughout. Loads of storage, PrI-. Fruit treat, fenced yard, tape-
vacv ML 17217. Make an offer on rate workshop, a comfortabla
U7 900 I 2 -badroom home for a couple
Call: ALICE MOORE 592-4S2e or small family. Asking price
of 042,900. includes stove and
BRENTWOOD BAY ;.77.o!fi“*iiEfTY silver .Tt-ms
3S6-358S
OPEN HOUSE
DAILY 1:30-4:30
THURS., FRI.
6-8 P.M.
(except Sunday)
5 NEW HOMES
KENMORE &
LLANDAFF
GORDON HEAD
-3 BEDROOMS
3’/a Per Cent
Exclusive Residential
HENDERSON REALTY
3054741 (anWima)
WEEKEND
DRIVE BYS
CLIP OUT THIS COLUMN
tM HOUSES FOB SALE
(fl
Nanaimo
Realty
FIRST TIME ADVER.
TISED
ASKING $56.91)0
—Close to university,
Uplands Golf Club.
—Spic and span throughout.
—3 bedrooms Plus potentiei
in basement.
—Wood burning fireplace.
—Attrective treed yard.
—Peaceful, friendly neigh*
! borhood.
FRED DIELEMAN * w
M0-5331 4704110 OAK BAY*
304-6331'"^'*'*"‘^4714140 J'" WESTDOWN - Lovely __
I Odrm. home in prime area. Full lor 3044563.
O IT A r> RA43/>VFRr>AI E I - rec. room. Asking t05J>OO. i
V U A U nA-SJLAJVr^tLLrAl.,eRlc. vv. ARNOLD 592*6454 i YOUR OFT’ER
ARI':A MAC^ McCORAAACK 592*6224) i'Jurvwrr.iv
ASraNG $54,900
VILTOKlA LTD.
formerly
OLYMPIC REALTff LTD.
$1600 DOVl'N
Could make this spacious weli-
decoreted condominium vours if
you qualHy for payments of ap-
‘ proximateiy $300. Loads of closer
I space, free laundry facilities, de-
Muxe fridge, stove and custom
drapes. Probably best 2 *bedroom
buy on market today — $32,000.
MELODY VILLENEUVE 315*5741
25B HOUSES FOB SALE
$63,500
Very attractive new home in a
small quiet subdivision In Brent*
wood. 3 bedrooms, full basement,
wrap around sundack. Very qood
construction with high quality cab*
Inals and carpeting. Full un*
derground services. M^LS 10575.
At Trclfcrd
3«*3120 ( 24 hrs.)
452*3717 (Res.)
QUICK POSSESSION
$68,500
Most dciireebte arae of Cordon
Head, immaculata and lust wait¬
ing to ba occupiad. 3 badrooms
plus extra finished room down.
Lots of pos^bilHies in full high
basement, wall-to-wall throughout.
Living room with fireplact, sepa¬
rate dining room. Kitchen is bright
and cheery with eating area and
adjoining sundeck. For Immediate
viewing cell: MLS 14993 .
366*3120 Audrey Crothers 477-66621
CLOSE TO i
SCHOOLS
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
$56,900
Immiculite 3-bedroom full ^se*
meat home on secluded Nx132 lot.
Living room with w-w and fire¬
place, separate dining room, with
class door to sundeck. Eating area
in kitchen. A good buy — don't
.miss this one. Call: MLS 17003.
'306-3126 Audrey Crothers 477*4662
JOE'S DRIVE-BY'S
MOVE RIGHT IN ’
423! SPR 1 NGRIDGE Or. Naw car¬
pets. New paint, family kitchan. 3
BR. 1',^ bathw full bast, 1*3 acre.
2 blocks to school, bus, park. MLS
S62.7N.
LIKE THE SEA? '
9466 Lochsida Or., Sidney. 2 com¬
fortable BRs on 1*3 ecrc lot across
from the water. Detached ecrege.:
MLS. Only $59,900.
SECLUSION
VIEWS
721 Grousewood Place. 3 BRs. 2
baths wrap-around surtdeck. Views
of straits. Mt. Baker and Victoria
skyline. Rec room with wet bar
and pool tabla. MANY EXTRAS.
MLS. S06,9OO.
COMFORT - PLUS
2022 Courser Dr., Sidney. 4 BRs. 2
baths, 2 fireplaces. Spacious rooms
with generous ceMncts and closets.
Eesv access to rear of lot. Double
parking for camper, traier, boat,
eic. Plush carpets throughout.
Would make good in-law arrange¬
ment. Covered sundeck. MLS
$03,900.
EXCEPTIONAL VALUE
Custom-built 3*bedroom home
on a quiet (3ordon Head cul-de-
sac. Ovar 1000 finished square
feet — Includes 2 fireplaces,
large family room down. Cita¬
tion cupboards. Double drIveJn
qaraqe and many more excit¬
ing features. For further infor¬
mation or to view, call Peter
Chown. MLS. Asking price
$03,900.
4774191 PETER CHOWN 4774767
MAC McCORAAACK
941 BYNG — New Tudor 3 bdrm. WELCOMED
. , family room. Price The owners of the following homes
—Profeaslonelly renovated , ^ ’ere In urgent need of a sale. Some
interior. F. CARVER 590-2511 lot them have already been irans-
—5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, base- ferred -and their properties are
ment. ^ TITY' vacant,'You may be surprised at
—Large landscaped yard. , V„ i i f . , your offer.
- Excellent location, close to i /$s Belton St. — 2 bdrm., renovat- <
all amenities. , ed and carpeted, 4 appliances
—Superb new kitchen cabl-1 Included $3%900.
nets. ,,STANTRONT
—Ideal starter or retirement: 2532 BEL/iWNT AVE.
^ room, no basement.
^ ^ -pS'Elt'DrELTTSlN''' 'soltiT&lcO
3 BDRMS, 2 BATHS
- - - TOWN N’ COUNTRY AREA !^
—2 Fireplaces
{—Bfoadloom throughout
I—Triple plumbing
comfortable MUCKER
653-33N. Colin Munro 652-3363 or
366-3565, anytime.
BOORMAN INVESTMENT
CO. LtD.. - 386-7521
'WO BEDROOMS
PULL BASEMENT
LARGE J'ENCED IXfV
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE;
FIVE MILES TO TOWT^
$54,500 (M.L.S.)
1201 PEARCE CRESCENT
Drive by end oail me to view.
HOCJSEA FOR SALK ] 253 COUNTRY HOMES
and PROPERTIES
Menn end AsMclatet Ltd.
GREAT
FOR
KIDS!
169,500
I Looking for a home close to all
'school levels and big enough for’
I your family, cars and pets? Fresh-
Jv painted and iclean, it offers a
[spacious living room with F.P. ad¬
joining dining room for that
REALTY LTD,
5« BasUaa Sq.
formation pleas# call Colin Munro.
FEATURE HOME
DEN, FIREPACE
Lovely home of suporlor quelHy! $48,500
and charm created through supcrp,
planning and spaciousness, where'
apace really counts. Bright cheer- <
ful living room with gorgoous 14''
wide white sugar reck fireplace, i
family-size dining room. Stunning)
kitchen with OSSS, ai>d lets of'
richly grained cabinets and iptcial
serving counter. Master bedroom
RiaiARDSON. (X>VT
HOUSE AREA
4 BEDROOMS
A Charming Victorian styie heme,
(extra large rooms, guest size din-
479-5931. room, beamed ceilings, 2 fire-
Excellent places, secluded property. Asking
477-2829
— 2 bed-
Tastefvilv
Nice tot
"starter home". 3 bedroom, full 1 675400. MLS. ALBAN BOWES
basement. Wail to well ceroet !477-5693. AL TASStE 304-9069.
throughout. $47,900.
[RANDY COLBERT
|19S1 ASHGROVE ST. -
I room, full basement
I MLS
JOHN LUKAZ
rooms, 2 bedrooms.
—Full basement, oarage.
—S0xl4t' lot, nicely land'
scaped.
—Wood burning firoolace.
-Convenient location.
—Immediate occupancy.
-Mountain view.
. . . . . FRED DIELEMAN
en suite. Delightful den with blatt-1306-4331 470-1110! 4153 TORQUAY
ed rock fireplace. Excellent bsmti DENNIS FERRILL built 2 bdrm,
.. 470-4140* .
FANTASTIC
SEAVIEWS
NOW ONLY .. _
$74,900 ; planned for future devetopment, 1 314-4331
Unbeiievablel Fully dtvtloped > R.l. 3-pce. bath. Low taxes, addi-
2 -ievei lovely family home on' tional parking for boat, trailar, GLEN LAKE
0.50 acres. Enlov qiorious sea- etc. Terrific value. Only $42.000 1 .-n
-i*** 70 uf sunny living j Phene Morris Lund, 306-3315. any.|$0».3W
GORDON HEAD:
full
479-9932 ESQUIMALT - GORGE
2 BEDROOMS
;A Cheerful bright modem home on
592-1900[service road within 1 biock of golf
course, tennis courts, swimming
and park. Features W-W carpeting
in living room, dining room and
halls. Fireplace. sundMk, drive In
Top qualityiparage, lower level could be devel-
high bsmt. oped, extra large lot, _Askir
room with fireplace,' dining ' time,
room with watk-out, weft I
planned kitchen with eating' VA/LJV
area. 3 large bedrooms len-i WrlY KtIN I
iHiilL ’ tMroom cw-
if o-T
'"-j-* •"■5"--
477-^1 HEIDE WHITE
1 rooms. 3 bedrooms.
—5 years old.
—Beautifuily treed yard.
—Ensuite plumbing
—Spacious and well
tained.
-Ensuite plumbing.
632-1120 ]7,IS.' Dave Roberts,
; Res., 477-1317.
frig.,
. MLS:
306-3505,!
--Cedar and stucco siding.
—Close to schools and shop
ping.
DENNIS PERRILL
.. _ ... Asking
finished rec. room, Ige. living [$59,300. MLS. ALBAN BOWES
room, $59,900. MLS 479-5493 or 303-S74I.
(STAN TRONT 477-2029'
i 1530 ASH ROAD — 4 bdrm., one VIEW ROYAL
j ^7.^°'Jf'isS 'wkiTi , FANTASTIC VIEWS
$09,000. I Of ocean, mountains and coastline
[C- ARNOLD 5e2-4454 from living and dining rooms,
J. AAcCORAAACK 992-4214'Kitchen and 2 sundecks. Picture
main- 1033 LOVAL — Seven year old in fireplace, 2 full baths, hot-water
! perfect condition from the lands- heat, u acre property. Asking
caping to the 9 rooms. Hardwood ; $09,000. MLS. ALBAN BOWES.
$48,800
3 BEDROOM?
2 BATHROOMS
this. Only
tor
Don't miss this. Only one —.
Brand new and extremely attrac¬
tive 2 -storey brick and stucco
townhouse In a lovely residential
area oil the beaten track but
within Quick and easy reach of
downtown Victoria. Front lawn
with hedge. Rear varanda and
patio. Richly carpated throughout.
Artractlve staisway with white and
gold wrought iron railing. Big
bright Kitc^ witih fridge, stove
ana dishwashtr. Beautiful ^ft.
long bathroom mirror. Approx.
1200 sq. ft. immediata possession.
(ML)
384-752I JOHN PLATT 363-2700
... ... .vv.., .VI wiai big
476-8963 suite, bright kitchen with lots <»
cabinets and nook. Three bed¬
rooms on the main floor, and one
in the Bsmt., with a new family 1
room, huge utility-workroom and I
dnve-in garage. There's a carewri
as well. This 10,000 sq. ft. lot has (.
all the room, lawns and shrubs
you could want. Here's a nome
you'd be proud to own and vour
kids would love Itl Sadger Road ft <
near Admirals and West Burnside
Rd. I'll be looking for you.
KEN MANN .c
Res. 477-6773 Kjtch 6 n i$
completely modern-
floors featured. Reatistic price of' 479-5693.
$69 900. Owner off to New Zea-
landf We'd be proud to show you ESQUIMALT
306-4331 *'“'. . ' '‘’'''’‘"'47I-4I40 MAc'mcCORMACK 592-6214 1 2-4 BEDROOMS
FRED ®*^LEMAN jCHARLIE ARNOLD j Located close to high school. Shops
4714110;39^ LEXINGTON •— Completely and transportetlon. Large living
ESQi:iMAI.T I uvfc'l'lf S
MLS. AlIaN BOWE?
CHEMAINUS
10143 VIEW STREET
immaculate 3-bedroom,
bathroom on large lot. Superb
and mainland mountains. Well
priced at $53,900. For more In¬
formation call:
, GEOFF RENNISON
477-0191 479-3972
OLD STYLE CHARMER!
FRESH NEW LISTING!
One block to the ocean in pop¬
ular James Bay. in an area ^
redevelopment. Three bed-
NEW, $55,500
1000 sq. ft. 2 -bedroom, fully best ,
men! home with utility on the)
Close in Whiteside area. Exclusive
— Lew Moilliet. 3I6-3505, Res., >
477-5251. I
RETIRED :
EXECUTIVE
1304-6331
Altr McCORAAACK
bdrm. 1 '.^ baths, modern and
992-6454 1479-5699.
VIEW' ROYAIa
4 BEDROOMS
A new home on quiet cul-Kie-sac.
^ster bedroom ensuite, tower
We offer you complete seclusion m
a spagous 2 bedroom home of su -1
..— ...vv---*.. w^- quality. 1600 sq. ft. on the'
rooms UP, Jiving room, dining ♦'w with two 4 pee.'
room with a floor.to<eilir>g -‘‘•♦krooms. Luxurious panelled liv-,
brick-through firepsact. Good' ‘"S eniovs beautiful sunset
sized kilCtSh with lOtVof cup -1 ' eocn
boards, plus utility room. Com-'Otter Point en approx. 3 Bcres. i ^ FRED DIELEMAN
Pietely fenced lot—small gar- Easy financing, vendor will carry ,306-6331
den. Good financing. Four the balanca at a favourable rate
maior apptiarvees included.io* interest to a qualifying our-
Asking $40,500 — and worth HI chaser. Open to offers on down
Exclusive wHh: 'oayment. Very well priced at
477-0I9I KNUDSCHWER 4784203! 687.500. Owner moving to the Inte¬
rior and must tell. MLS. Mr.
James 306-3505. or 4774134.
Immeculate condition
throughout. 1
—Beeulifui iindscaped tet. I
-p^ in "vInB WEST:
—Lgrgg rec room In bete-1
—G(Md'«iz*d kitch»ft ^^ t AAAOOOCK --- Charming |figor at o*found* leveT lnclu'des''f#c'-
“ 7 , 9 ®" I 1 bdrm. cottage 2 appliances reatlon end rumpus room, sundeck
—Aluminum windws through-! included Only $37,900. 1 .w"’'
out. —... —-...V
—Attached garage.
—Two bedrooms on
floor.
DENNIS FERRILL
WELCOME
TO OUR
NEIGHBOURHOOD
NORTHRIDGE
TERRACE
Follow Tha oranga and Black
Signs
Off Vanalman Avenua
High Location With Vitws. Trees,
and No Thru Traffic, Yat Closa to
Schools, Parks, Busas. Shopping.
Just 10 Minutes to Down-Town Vic¬
toria.
22 Homas Still Avaliabla Fricad
From $70,700 to $79,300.
VISIT OUR
SHOW HOME
And Lat
Ron Charwaty or Harry Atkav
Show You Around
Ooan For Inspaction
3-9 p.m. Waakdays
14 p.m. Sat. and Sun.
Or Call
HOMES OPEN
FrI. 4-9, Sat.-Sun. 1:30-5
1039, 1064, 1151 and 1052 Teakwood
(oH McKenzIa and Fleet) end 1414
Einido (off Shtibourne near Mt.
Doug)
$67,500 to $75,000. all top quality.
NHA, CMHC, mambar HUDAC,
compiata warranty, 3 badrooms.
master ansulte, larga tundacks, in-
'ercstinq and varied floor plans,
some very special, pra-grrangad fl-
nancirxi, tots of room fer expan¬
sion in full daylight basamants.
Check our Insulation and other top
features. Move in before school
starts. (Closa to UVlc and other
schools.) Trades considered. Call
KEN McCANDLESS, KASAPI
CONST. CO. LTD. for further di¬
rections and speclficat'ions or sea
me there. 3064191 or 47M606.
I NEAR THE SEA
I AND AAARINAS
BRENTWOOD BAY
This immaculate 3-bedroom
home en an extra large well
landscaped lot is ottered at
$63,900. 14 months old, I'/z
baths, fully carpeted. Full
I basement, with study and 3rd
I bedroom down. Dishwasher in-
I eluded. Alt underground ser-
1 vices. Convenient to schools.
I bus. shops. Unobstructed views
I to the east. For further infer-
I mation on this property cell:
477-0191 AAARY A600DY 6524661
1. GORDON HEAD
SOME SEA VIEW
Up to 5 bedrooms, 3
bathrooms, living room, fire¬
place, dining room. Lovely
family room, fireplace, all for
$94X)00.
2. FAIRFIELD — PARK
099,500
3 bedrooms. 2 bathrooms. <
Large living end dining rooms,
big kitchen, basement. Can be
private home or revenue.
For Information on above pro¬
perties call;
JOHN or ROiWA AAOLYARO
-677-Oiei Eves. 364-4627
ORIVE-BYS
$93,000-044 PEARS Read » Met-
chosin Spacious home, 2 acres,
secluded. AALS 10642.
$74,900—470 HAIDA Drive — Tri¬
angle Mtn. — NEW HOME, 3
bedroom, 34 acre treed lot.
electric heat.
$40,500—1159 CLARKE Road —
Brentwood — TO-ycar-old char¬
acter home. 4 bedrooms, large
lot. MLS 10431.
$41,000—2 bedroom Condominium
en HILDA Street, close to Bea¬
con Hill Park. MLS 17745.
GALE CHRISTENSON
6774191 477-7047
GET AWAY ON YOUR OWN
SAANICH MINI-FARM
Complete privacy 1$ vours on
this Vaerg mini-farm located
within the lO-mlle circle of
Victoria. Immaculate 3-ievel
home, of superior construction
and finishing. Is sItM to give
a birds eye view of the valley
and surrounding hills. AAust be
seen to be appreciated.
$135,000. MLS 14044.
DALE YOUNG
4774I9I (Page 171) 477-7366
DALE YOUNG
BILL KAPTEYN
6774191 452-1262
C APARTMENT BLUES?
^CHEER UP IN THIS CUTIE
Small but a goodie, this 2-bed-
reom full basement home Is
ideal for the young family buy¬
ing its first house. Bright
l7x15W living room with wrap¬
around fireplace; completely
modernized kitchan with dish¬
washer and sliding doors to
large sundeck. Try your down
payment on asking price of
$69,900. MLS 17435.
DALE YOUNG
4774191 (Pager 170) 477-73U
_ BILL KAPTEYN
774191 4i92 -142
Development Co. Ltd.
476-1721 '
Member Victoria H.U.O.A.C.
COLWOOD
RANCHER
OPEN HOUSE
.- carport. Asking $41,500.
lit". ALBAN BOWES, ,7,.S«3.
|3201 LINWOOD — Townhouse — 3 ;
' Sirise’Joo I 'TRADES CX>NSn>ERED
STAN TRONT 477-2629 ’ HOMES and SWIMMING
POOL
The charm and qualily of this
rvA*.AT>A«r I home l» exemplified by its decor
CAK B.\Y '1574 GRODICK CRES. — Lovely and the lawns, fruit trees and
-2 storey homa In excellent' strata duplex consisting of living . flowers that complete Its environ-
condition room, dining room, and 3 targe ment. 3 bedroom, master ensuite.
—4 Mrooms bedrooms. Tremendous view, sundeck. lower level ready for
—French doors In dining *51.900. development. Pool 35'x1l'x8' deep
471-1118 ISAANICH EAST:
FAIRFIELD
3 BEDROOMS
2 BATHROOMS
Charming English cottage
5 Bedrms
— 214 Bthrms.
Saanich Peninsula
Only 11 miles from
Victoria, 2800 sq. ft.
of accommodation,
on .52 Ac. with fish
pool, trees ond lawns.
There's o wide pillar¬
ed porch across the
front, awnings over
big windows and o
bolcony at second
floor level. The den
has o f.p., bookselves
and H.W. fl.. Living
rm has w to w, big
window overlooking
the garden and f.p.,
Bus. 590-5144
mil!
An old Fernwood gem with living
and dining rooms. 3 pee. bath,
ktch. and 3 bedrooms. Not bad In¬
side but could use a faca-lift. ir¬
regular shaped tot. Duplex zoned.
Good holding property. Presently
rented for $195.00 Per month, fi¬
nancing available. Very possible
... . style,to build a new house toward rear
bungalow with leaded bay window of lot. Drive by 2014 Fernwood.
and rolled gable roof on beautiful- New MLS.
ly landscpaeo corner lot with sev- { KEN A6ANN
oral big trees within easy walking , Bus. 590-5144 Res. 477-6773
distance of downtown Victoria and ; _ . —
the sea. But at door. School 3:
blocks. Separate OR. 22 ft. RR.
Bio bright Idy off 11x12 Kitchen.,
Full bsmt. Spare room. Garage.
Immediate possession. $71,900.
(ML).
)04-7S31 JOHN PLATT 303-2700 |
QUICK POSSESSION ,
On this 2-BR stucco, sparkling!
ttaan home. You will enjoy pleas- Are vou searching for;
ant view from living room, sep8-|—A quality renovated home at a
rate dining room, high basement i reasonable price,
with targe rumpus room. Finished]—3 large b^rooms.
in knotty pine. Owner moved to 1 —Living and dining rooms
apartment, must sell. $53,500. 1 —Bright, modern kitchen and eat-
306-7521 OLGA ZACHARY 592-2265 Ing area.
I— Full basement
PERFECT FOR —Gerage-workshoo
BIG
FAMILY
HOME
$49,900
ACADEMIC
Or persons apprecieting LOCA¬
TION. CHARM and CONVE¬
NIENCE. Quiet cut-lc-sac of Rich-
ized, dining is count¬
ry style off the kitch¬
en, big, bright ond
convenient. There's o
2 pee bothrm off the
sunrixim. Main fl in¬
cludes o master suite
with F.P. in bedrm,
pretty 4 pee bothrm
and separate dress¬
ing rm. Upper fl has
4 more big bedrms,
the biggest 18x15.5,
another big 4 pee
bothrm and spacious
hall with occess to
the balcony. Outside
is double garage and
i other outbuildings.
lower
.. development. Pool 35'x10'x0'
RANDY COLBERT 479-5932 is heated and filtered. Asking
-Newly modernized kitchen. 15^ PARKER AVE. — Spectacu- ^,900. MLS. ALBAN BOWES
—Hardwood floors ang lots ‘h* smvIows combined with gra- 479-5693..
cf character clous living. t400 sq. ft. with 2
—Call now. MLS $79,900 i Ml bathrooms. Steps to atndv ■ SHAWNICiANMj^KEFRONT
306-6331 DON BECKNER 3164501 ^ teach.
—Extra parking
—Room for gardens
—Close to schools and bus _
...... fiS“o;;.^°s'’'!!Ii« wrehAMd. ,i..|The house is sound
well cored for, o
College. Very charming mature .Pot at least $5,000 down • knmo
residence. Large but easy to main- and an average income. Cali usipivneer nOme bci
tain grounds with lawns, ripe or-;now for more details. MLS. 1 U:-,
chard, shrubs. A reel gam for ask-iSTAN PELLAND 590-5427,OmODO ulQ Sn006
In® price of $02,000. KEN MANN 477-67731. ^ ^
384-7531 OLGA ZACHARY S92-224510FFICE
HEART OF FAIRFIELD !
Excellent residential area and:
comfortable J-BR stucco home.
Large LR with fireplace, dining-
I room, full basement, separate 1
garage. $52,000. MLS 1800S.
,304-7521 OLGA ZACHARY 992-2265
Beautiful treed 7>'7 acres. Gentle
MUSTSEUa*!!
UVNCJFORD
$48,900
OPEN HOUSE
MONDAY TO SATURDAY
2 PM TO 4:30 PM.
—Excellent stacter.
•^ull high basement.
—2 bedrooms on main, 1
down.
—Good sized living room
QUICK POSSESSION
: RANDY COLBERT 679-5932 . ^ ^
,962 SATURNA — Scavlew, custom | aSkiJS ThSm'ML ioo3' I NEIAR SIDNEY
home. W 0 nv extna - 2 bed-i |? coSjCwSb^ ^ ’r 2 ’^'ove to EPCO Rd. oH Wyler, for
home
big
Se-1i«!trees and hedges. The
trZ rjUl owners ore leoving
jJU.JUU town, asking price is
,$84,000.
GRAY LORENZEN
652-1038
i or 383-4151
BRENTWOOD
'SIDNEY:
with fireplace.
—New plumbing in
and bathroom.
—Good sized let.
—MLS 19250.
7114 and 7120 HOGAN ROAD —
Sundecx and sea views — qua¬
lifying for B.C. Second of $5400.
Still at old rataa.
,C. ARNOLD 992-445
kitchMi AIREDALE — Extra Special.
Riicnm You rally should see inside. Ask-
, Ing $59,900.
|C. ARNOLD
I _ -
OBNNI8 FERRILL if
304-4331 4704140 -1. AAcCORAAACK
FRED DIELEMAN _ _
■""'"I ESQUIMALT:
GORDON HEAD '
992-4654
592-4654
5924214
dlsRsyfonr
655 FX)RT ST.
384-9335
446 STRANOLUNO RD.
(follow signs off Island Hwy. and
Milistroam Rd.)
ROCKHEIGHTS
Modern family bungalow in prime
,area. Features three bedrooms —
Stucco, 2' spacious living room — guest size
, 2 fire-[dining room. All carpeted. Full
the neatest 5-yr-oid 3 B.R. home,
with finished basement room and
enclosed carport. A very pleasant -
area, easy to reach, easy to buy.,
Asking $55,000. C.T. If not sold by;
Sept, isl will be rented. Exclusive,
tId‘'kaT’*' anvlime, RIGHT NOW, AVAILABLE FOR A
^7521 or ^-75* ‘-‘MITED TIME ONLY - THIS
! UNIQUt, CHARACTER-FILLED
I HOME CAN BE YOURS. TWO
BEDROOMS, DEN. ARCHED
CHECK
IT
OUT!!
IDEAL LOCATION
For discriminate family. Quiet and
good neighbourhood, Lansdowne-
Richmond area. Schools, shopping
centre. University, city close by.
No need to fight traffic or com¬
mute many mTles. GOOD HOME,
three bedrooms, two bath *’ooms.
fireplace in living and rumpus - — - -
room Full basement, private' EXCLUSIVE VIEWING
grounds. $61,500. To view please
call:
306-7521 OLGA ZACHARY 592-2365
HIGHLANDS
6 V 2 ACRES
FINE HOME
OOG uurni., imiwiva r«t. nn.. i rwjm. aii carpereo. eun ' /-.j-.nr-t:' iir
. Places, adiolning garage, $49,900. basement with rec room. Beauti-, GORGE WATERp RONT
THIS COULD BE YOUR FIRST'STAN TRONT 477-28W.fully, landscap^ with good park-IOnly a block away from fully
HOME WITH V/i% FINANCIT9G I FRED CARVER 59S4644{ino. Handy to schMis. shopping ' renovated duplex with a three bM-
• AVAM.ABLE, 3 8EDR(30MS, 933 COLVILLE ROAD — 3 tdrm., end churches. Vendor moving out 1 room suite on the main floor and a
» y«,_ (o, eb^LEX^.'^ . 00 . ,xp.n.
OLD-BRICK FIREPLACE, PRI¬
VATE SUNDECK OFF MASTER(
BEDROOM (AVEC ENSUITE).
AND PLUSH CARPETING. WELL:., ^
YOU'LL LOVE IT - THERE'S ^6^>adroom
STILL MORE! CALL ME^ FOR 2
" CLU5IVE VIEWING.
KEN MANN
Neil R. MocDonold
LOOKING?
386-3494 (24 hrs.)
charm and character, this has got • ''' ^7 ,
to^beltl. Th..ivrng room.ishuo. WTlDn
D IT I ON, NEWLY REOECO-1 CU’LWUUU,
RATED. TRY YOUR DOWN PAY-' - ---
MENT.
and features a natural cedar
finish, cathedral calling with open
beams, separate bar area, a beau¬
tiful haatilator firaplaca and air
conditioning. Separate dining
room, a huga 13x17 kitchan with
hand-crafted cabinets, three large
bedrooms, two bathrooms and a
large double carport. All this and
more on a naturally saciudad. easy
care lot. (If you like the outside,
you'll love the InsMa.) Offers to
$63,900.
PERFECT
RETIREMENT
DEEP COVE
BUILDER'S HOME
BRICK an(J CEDAR
RANCHER
On full acre, with barn, ore*n-
house, young producing orchard,
ur>dergrcur>d irrigation, 750 g.d.h.
welt.
ECONOMICAL
—Hot water heat
—1,216 sq. fl. interior
—040 so. ft. garaoa
—16x16 covered patio
—2 bathrooms
—2 bedrooms
MANY EXTRA FEATURES
LOW TAXES
BELOW REPLACEMENT VALUE
$66,000 656-3692
VIEW ROAD:
BRIAN BUTLER Ijjk wishart _ 3 m
LirM/-viN I i-ur\ . old with 2 bAdrowT, su™. ... ™.-
595-5171, 477-6534 ; S'SJj.’aJ''*"'*'"- Excnmi
(Coll for Address)
CANADA TRUST
\V. K.
084-9335
$72,300
(WH.) WH-SON
SOOKE
JUST REDUCED
basement, coriwr lot. I couid^ 90 on B-bdrm. home listed at only 1 ^
IWatl-to-Wail carpets, new old brick |
[fireplace, bay window, full hlqh
$ive but doesn't r>eed rerwvations?
and on, but why don't you have a
look for yoursalf. Priced at $62,900. ■
J77.J >>n **’1* flexible financinq, this Is topli®^^'*®^ ,
sIw'mo* iS2"9O0. Ck» VT’evervihmgr'ln''tl^[^R, DR, FP New largeYol.
Priced at $w,9w. Country area, ffVt home ' mountain ind ocean views.
. ...svs _
PETER DUECK Of
MIKE WESTON
656-6060 306-7521 590-3955
1835 MERIDA PLC.
(Off San Juan)
Conn In Saturday afternoon and
inspect this attractive custom-built
homa. Its net your ordinary "spec
house" but of unique design with
quality features thro'out, too nu¬
merous to describe. For the Pur¬
chasers who want something dif¬
ferent, quality construction, views
from the sundack, In-law suite po¬
tential. don't miss this one. Satur¬
day Aug. 21 — 2-6 P.m. Frank
^^ish Realty Ltd.. 315-5113.
BY BUILDER
Fantastic split-level house, Gordon
Head off San Juan. 1760 sq. ft.
finished. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
icustom kitchen, wali-lo-v/ail
: throughout, feature fireplace,
(finished rac. room with adjoining
1 2-piece washroom. driv4-in oarage,
[closa to buses, schools, and shop-
[ Ding. Come and see the extras.
{Perfection Contracting Company
Ltd.. 677.9095,
$67,000
OAK BAY - ESTATE SALE
Drive by "2070 C 0 rn 0 rvon". 3 bed¬
room full basement bungalow on
level lot. Close to park. Drive by
— Call to see over. Early posses¬
sion.
$63,000
GLIMPSE OF THE SEA!
Drive by "1560 Cedar Gian" 3 bed¬
room full basement bungalow on
36 acre. Attached carport with
sundack and glass conservatory
above.
Excellent separate double garage
and workshop. Loads of parking
for boat, camoer etc.
Abovt 2 LISTI^S EXCLUSIVE
With HERB HOCGSON, 314-7120
Res 312-3035
DOUGL^ HAVi^S Ltd.
UP FOR
ADOPTION
A delightful 3 bedroom family
home in the Gianford Area with a
truly tranquil pastorai vligv of the
planned park next door. Full high
basement room for further devel¬
opment. SRotltssiy clean — a Plea-
I to sftow, * - -
DESIRE
If YOU desire a custom horns
where quality of workmanship,
class, tfvla and finishing count
more than price, Perfaction Con¬
tracting Company wiK build vou
the homo of your desires. 477-9093.
TOWN
AND !
COUNTRY'
REALTY
FAHMERS
A
■MERCUANTSI
TRUST
‘REAL ESTATE HAS A PRICE"
•'INTEGRITY IS PRICELESS"
731 FORT STREET
GORGE
NEW LISTING
$5.000D^ 3YEP
Executive Gordon Head late inside and
IMMACU-
.. _ _ _ OUT. 2
BDRMS.. KITCHEN WITH EAT¬
ING AREA PLUS DINING ROOM.
UTILITY ROOM, NICE SIZE LIV¬
ING ROOM WTH F.P. ALL
RO<3MS W-W. LANDSCAPED
home 3 bdrma and den. full
basevpent. en suite, and 3rd
bathixxmi. Ready to be
finished in basement covered drive
Iijiisiieu UI uoAcriiiuiii. nriuii^^Y. OWNER ANXIOUS.
suiable arrangements weiPRicEO to sell at $49,900.
CM move you RIGHT NOW. a8f9V72^^HARRY' palm 314-7229
Qose to all schools yet <m;-
quiet no-through street. Cal)I
Allan Kl«iman, 592-9771 or^
382-7276.
REAOry LTO
TEN MILE POINT
3915 BEDFORD RD.
592-6214'' Beautiful 4-badroom tudor home 7 OWNER TRANSFERRED
593^654 on quiet cul-de-sac, lust 1 year old. ntiTMiT’PTs ty^ 9 R 9 onn
-r 3000 sq. ft. of gracious living. Can- Rr-DuCEL) 1\J JbZ.WU
■ tral work area kitchen with family'This Is a 4 bedroom, 2 bath
room and utility off. massive sun. i beauty, only 3 years old In a con-
ktn living room, separate dining 1 venient Saanich location. An ex¬
room and bulH-in dinetta, un-icelient family home, with rec.
finished rec room over 3-car gar- room in full basament and a Ige.
age. Irregular '.j acre lot Far tooifanced corner lot. Already an ex-
many amanitles to mention. For ceilent value, anxious owner wilt
further details call. MLS 19091. , consider all offers. Possession
Asking: may be immediate. Call now:
^ PETER DUECK or
$51,900 $174,000 MIKE WESTON 306-7521
Two bedroom full basement iMADGE <x DON ROBBI.\S[ lin (Sovernment st.
home in the Hillside Mall' 384-9335 384-9072
area, (kxxl sized kitchen I Bi-ntir-s-ro
wth VITO'S of the Oljjmpic | GORDON Hi.'AD
Mts. Iireplace m living, ..mil, bvnsalov. wata™ ,
room. Small sewing room. I (>*<iFooms — attractive living 1
o -4sBOAA fl-— 11 [room and dining room bright*
MLS 17892. To View call . kitchan with e^ing area — rec '
KRJ^ filTDTON^SnN iroom with fireplace — room fori
nos _^'additional dev^pment. Large lot
384-8101 595-3022 1 with room tor boat or trailer.
j Early possession. ML 17643.
mo^rn lichen Moa-lGarport, sundeck and lull
rate Din flm. and mountain views j $66,500. MLS. 17916.
from the extra large wndecic. Plusi 0j|| WilsOD
ment, bus at door, yet walk- InciSei*
ing distance
MLS.
to “Village.'
3 BEDROOMS
2 BATHROOMS
WALL-TO-WALL
RANGE, FRIDGE.
DISHWASHER
Newly completed townhouse, high
location, swaaoing views Just
minutes from town. Excellent buy
at only $41400. To view phone
6» via!;°*-‘^^»2l764^«J^^6ti6uiR£^^^ TO $63,000.
- _ - _ . BILL KNOWl-ES
For Sole by Owner 384-8101
Sidney attractive split-level home 3 i
badropma, IW baths. Hying room'-
with fireplace, dining room, watt
to watt carpeting, enclosed patio,
oarage and larqe fenced lot on
quiet cut de sac. Dishwasher,
fridge, stove and drapes included.
Asking $61,900 open to offers.
656-1049.
HANDYMAN
SPECIAL
$40,500
, c«,ir ifvaMaaiuii. fvit ifvaj. Plenty Of Character, 3 bedrooms. 2
I 1 fireplaces, near the sea and
ibaachas. New MLS. GLENN Nl-
CHOLLS 596-7609 or 592-3431.
THREE BEDROOMS
PLUS
In this older but sound home en
FORBES STREET. There is a '
home Is sold bv e^ of AugusL I?/?*' bright living room, a large
L^\e-in .-.Ill <,L. .dining room and an equally gener-
$79,900
(WIL) WILSON
477-4328
SOUTH
OAK BAY
3 B.R.s, L.R. with fireplace. 384-9335
.separate family^sized D.R.. j ^^^EN LAKE AREA
.3-pce. oath. Kitchen cab,.’ p this fin. 4 bedroom. 6 year old
elec.. « 1 th b»r. Dnve-in ’
a high bsmt. for vnorkshop or fur¬
ther development. Move right In.
Call today before it's sold. !
Gerry Martin
386-3494 (24 hrs.)
COUNTRY LIVING
If vour heart aches for a little
open space, here is a brand new
3-bedroom rancher on 2 acres near
Mill Bay. Over 1400 sq. ft., large
i-irn fififf. I kitchen dining, big living
'hoorn with _fir§olace. Big double
pAoremes ltd./ realtors
1247 ACTON STREET
HOME WITH REVENUE
USE THE MONTHLY INCOME
It''’*Pi6ce. Big aoubi#
‘-•'■port, and ensetosed workshop.
^^BaSooms 1 Cleared sunny lot in nice.area of
—iVj Baths " '
—Large Kitchen
:WC , _
592-6730
acreage homes. No tretfio, good
well, pick vour own carpet colours
with'crr.oiar* ' *hd movc Ini Listed today at
uni-T 1 YR. OLD AND PRICED ! Humphrey Golby.
TO SELL AT ONLY $71,900 592-6730
306G124
firaplaca. 1200 sq. ft. on main floor ,, 1 .-,,^ ^-.^1 . i»..Mr./
• brighf spacious living >i*aP'ti 0 .hooms and a laundry
$59,500
Millstream
OPEN HOUSE
1:00 to 4:00 p.m. weekdays
"Hobby Horse"
Elk Lake
$119,000
; Two acres of cleared level and'
'fenced land located en a quiet cui
de-sac off Old West Saanich Rd
'above Elk Lake. Two year
old
OAK BAY
OLDER TUDOR STYLE HOME,
corner iet in low tax Esquimau. 3
bedroom, 1 </^ bpth, wall to wall,
fireplace, solid fir paneiting. full
basement, attic storage, fridge,
stove, washer, dryer. On bus
route, close to schools. Large
fenced yard, garden and
trees. $55,000. Phone 304-6339.
room with raised hearth fireplaceI mw quality built tudor style residence features
dining area with glass doors to son;D**!lP0 'Hucker Home with 3 bedrooms, - three bedrooms, sewing room, den
* ■ ' jms, 1*1 baths. CalliiVa bathrooms, w-w carpet, spa- or office, larqe family room, 2W
jewus living room, dining room, bathrooms, cantilevered natural
comb., full basament, carport and rock firaplaca and burnt aabla ac-
t sundeck. cents in living room and dining
- „ 27W Ralnviile Rd. off'. jfoom. A practical sizad hobby
Hoffman Ave. and Mitlstream Rd. farm with pastoral country views
35 -1 HUGO HUCKER CONST. over acres and acras of rural un-
3a2-92i2 _ 9 a.m.-4 p.m. i developed properties. Immediate
- possession possible. M.L.S.
deck. 3 bedrooms, I'l baths., oetco
F inished bedroom and tk. room P=ter
down with extra rooms for den or ’
inlaw suite. Beautifully treed tand-
ccc *YT 7 Q ^apad comer lot. Owner trans-
bbb-i7(y ftrred. MLS 10627. Asking:
I AARDON. $92-3631.
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
306-9335
$61,900 '
DON ROBBINS
F^STATE SALE
NE.^R HILLSIDE PLAZA
fruit Attractive 3 bedroom tudor, (2 on
I the mam and 1 in the full hioh
New listina In enuth oek B*w CH - ’basement). Large living room with- . .
i" W,y‘”i3X.Si| RICHMOND-JUBILEE WEATHER
corner lol and fadturjnd 3 bed.! 3 bedroom. V/i baths, end unitlH2|L, "SSn e..'bilSir^na’SSi I EVERYONE NEEDS A ROOF
'!».™j".««^_''»l™i'«»'«»bse_witn .ull basemen,. an rr^I!l MLS ojIS mS HE«^ e jSd
■" )9061. Asking: -
On this excopfional, weit-buHl ..
1 year-old, 3-bedroom home in Fair- .
.field. Home has good-siz^ kitchen i
[With eating area plus separate dln-
! Ino room and large living room, 2
iCafhrooms and big rec. room with
I doors opening to patio. Asking
$66,900. Vendors are anxious so
call: JOHN WEST, 592-2631 Of
656-5009.
WITH THIS
$41,500
By owner — 2 bedroom — log
kitchen, new carpets, tastefully de¬
corated, full basement — new wir-
ing, automatic heating — view lot.
Don't pass this one by. AAove In
today.
Phone 470-6376 anytime.
253
OPEN HOUSE
9ATURDAY-SUNDAY 2-4
NEW BY BUILDER
1330 RAFIKI WAY •••» .$
"Left Off West Saanich to Mar-1 school starts.
READY??
FOR SCHOOL
room with F.P., dining room. In a quiet street In a small com
tha full baMmant Is another bed- plex. Large assumable 10$* mort-
;room, don and rec. room. Will not gage. $49,900. 590-3370.
last long at the full price of 66,900 --—— -
1 (MLS).
John Bunvan or Ken Wright
. Bus. 306-6796 RtS. 3I3-7777
Roe. 990-2113
chant then flut left off Marchant"
Quality consti^ction and a spacious
design make this 1350 sq. ft. house
an excellent buy. Features like a
large double carport, wrap-around
sundack that gets sun from dawn
'till dusk, custom-builf cabinets,
bit extras $65,900. Phone 479-5270.
BY OWNER
GortJon Heed Area
.. jage -n . _ - -
modern home, oak floors through¬
out, nice landscaping, vary large
lot. 1780 Hartwood, phone 477-3556
for appointment to view.
OPEN BY ByiL(^R
2757 -60 LEIGH RD.
Two naw houses left. Asking
$59,500 to $62,500. For hwo and
three badreooms. vary wall built.
Contractor needs money for next
proiact. Good views. In area of
new homes. Close to everything,
Try vour offer S. Barbon attend¬
ing alt day. 479-1194.
Sea our naw homas almost com-i
plate, and raadv for you before'
school starts. Close to Falrburn'
Elementary, Mt. Doug High. UVIC
and racquet club. Featuring 3
bdrms., full bemnt., mstr. ansulte,
beautiful naw designs. Still time to
pick carpets and tile. NOW IS
THE TIME. CALL KEN McCAN-
OLESS, KASAPI CONS. CO.
306-6191. 470-4606._
PRACTICALITY
is the key note In this modern,
four bedroe, two bathroom home
on nearly an acre of riaarad and
fenced, land in one of the most
desirable rural areas In Victoria.
t.SOO sq. ft. of developed area In
the house. Includes living room
with fireotacc. dining rm., nsedern
kitchan and 3 badrooms on main
floor and a I bedroom in-iaw suite
downstairs. Outbuildings suitsbia
for chickens, goats, ponies, etc
Larga fteurishing vegetable gar¬
den. Lass than \3 mile to elemen
lary school and only to minutes
from town. A great family heme.
$70J)OC. 650-0579. No agents.
U-VIC AREA
f,130 ta. ft. no-stap 2 -badreem
home, separate garage, large se¬
cluded tread lot, 2 flreplacts,
477-9734. $55,500.
FAMILY HOME
RLUS
$150 mo. income
By owner, $59,900. A well built
spacious home, on large lot in pop¬
ular location “• .
FULL PRICE $59,900
DRIVE BY 644 GRIFFITHS
And call buildar, 479-0403. We
think you will like this little house,
open this weekend.
^?ew BRENTWOOD BEAUTY
Large and sunny 3 bedrooms, an-, i— -
suite, fireplace up and down, large
level lot with creek, convenient to *55JX)0.
_ .. ... r,.. all schools, shopping snd bay. !6 r9-2« r. _ _
Plus self-contained 1652-3097 , 7041 Hagan Rd. $67X)00. ^ *
lone, in a gulat and convenient'
{location, for $54,900. 3 BR and a |
300 - • I total of 1250 sq. ft. with a large [
!garage-workshop and greenhouse I
MAIXiE nr DON ROBBINS on an extra large lot make this an i
3 a 4.«335 304.0072 ^96calient starter or family home,
.■(rjrcr. . . .. immediate Possession. Call: JAYi
BY OWNER (HINTON, 6S2-1364 or 592-2431. '
In dasirabit Lake Hill district, IVi- U A'KirvVKA A M
storey home, one bedroom and “/MNL/T/V\^IN
study main floor, 2 rooms up.l CCl^l 11 KA A I T
Finished rec. room in full base-1
Character 2 storey with hioh base
iXHJNTRir HOMES
.4ND PROPERTIES
cottage ranted at $150
Closa to schools and buses.
479-6905^ after 5. 384^7;_
(K)NZALES CHARMER
Delightful older family home en
raised corntr lot block from
Gonzales Beach, closa to schools,
bue, store end shopping center.
This Fairfield beauty has large liw.
ing and dining room. 2 bedrooms
and bath on main floor, with 2
badrooms down. Berries and vege¬
table garden planted. All for
$68,500. Phene 470-7503.
BY OWNER
Newer home In Fernwood Bav-
jubllae area. 3 bedrooms, targe
living room, dinling area. 4-pitce
bath, firaplaca, extra bedroom and
l-place bath In basemant. 3BS-9O60.
YEAR OLD SPLIT LEVEL IN
Sooke, for aele bv owner. Com¬
pletely finished up and down. 2 >/t
baths, firaplaca, wall to vrall car-
potino throughout, beautifutiv land¬
scaped 643-3713.
- BY OWNER GORDON HEAD
10-SUiTE APARTMENT ANdI,..,, —.. .—'•
house and e house under construe-Wycliff# Pi. Lovely 1'4 veer pley Bus. $W-2431. Res. 991-5643,
tion ell In the backyard. Inquire in ^ bedrooms.
ment on duplex zon^ 00x102 tot.
Total of 7 bodrooms and 2 bath
rooms. Little effort could be a nat¬
ural duplex or emmenxe sln^'le
family. .$61,500. .Call:.BRIAN _R|.
backyard to'owner. 2771 'jacklin Igarage, fully lanjF
Rd. Langford. Private sale, no «?«*^**'
real estate. [ possession. 477-0695._ •
GLEN LAKE, PRIVATE SALE. I CX>LWOOD OPEN HOUSE , -
2-^drwm. lat^e living r^m with, o^ner mutt tell, very nice 3 bed-1 iSTfl?.®®’
“'"ft?*''' poo"' I*"!** 1'^ lull's- Develop-
ment, large lot with carport and ment In full basement. Large
paved driveway. Dead-and street.-treed li ' ‘
Drapes included. $40,800 . 478-9469. 14704204 .
RAINBOW PARK
Split level. 3 large bedroom
(master ensuite), den, family
room, fireplace In living room,
bright kitchen, separate 1Sx46
workshop, 00x135 lot. $50,000.
656-1620.
INFORMATION AND
ASSISTANCE IN
SELECTION AND PURCHASE
OF PROPERTIES IN SIDNEY
AND NORTH SAANICH
SPARLING AT SIDNEY
REAL ESTATE » INSURANCE
Offices Opposite the Theetre
SPARUNG REAL ESTATE
666-Kll
656-5183 Evenings 656-2630
BRENTWOOD BAY, MARCHANT
Road. Naw bi-level. 2.350 sq. ft.
finished area. Could be very pri
vate In-law suite. S79.900. 652-3753.
FAIRFIELD. 345 LINDEN, OPEN
house Salurdey 3:00 to 7:0 p.m.,
Sunday 1:00 I 0 5:00 p.m.
NO DOWN PAYMENT
For working couple, S bedroom.
Cftv. 590-5537.
AMu*mebIe' mwTpeJes'i DUPLEX LOT CITY
Assumeoie mongeges. I0xl4l' lot near R. Ath-
..tetic Park. Has old. but habitable
253f PRIOR JaSf
LEVERTON REALTY 305-8012
Attractive 4 bedroom home, large
living and dining rooms, cozy kit-
chan, full basement with drive-in
garage. Walking distance to town.
$53,900. 479-2990.
BY OWNER
3-bedreem modern heme, on sunny
location with beautiful views, fami¬
ly rec. room, sauna, double
garage. Peaceful area, large lot.
Open to offers. 999-3976.
$2000 DOWN
2-bedroom now, could be 4. Fire¬
place sawing room, full baaament.
waii-to-wall carpet throughout,
garage, large lot. $43,900 full price.
Phone owner 479-2309 or 652-1S62.
GOOD STARTER. 130.000. 3 BED-
room, no basansent. Lan^ord.
476-6368.
10.09 ACRE HOBBY FARM. MOO-
arn 6 year old 3 bedroom full
basement home has small lake ad¬
joining property. Full irrigation, 3
acres of timber and balance
cleared. Price $147,500. Duncan
746-6609.
SOOKE SECLUSION. COMFORT-
able contemporary cedar home on
2 floors. 1108 square feet, 3 bad¬
rooms, 1<-^ bathrooms. 1.25 grassy
acres, adjoining woods. $52to0.
642-55 00. 64241 06-
GOROON h'iB^VltD.
sioney-saanich peninsula
Brent D. Ewim
’5
iS-M
(Res. iS-SUO
FIVE ROLLING
ACRES
$119,000 WITH
EASY FINANCING
Ideal for horses, cattle, etc. Situat
ed in a prestige area In North
Saanich. All fenced and cross
fenced and has nine stall horsa
barn, tack room, and 1.300 sq. ft.
of feed storage area. Sixteen yr.
old three-bedroom home with dou¬
ble attached garage. 500,000
Gal. reservoir. There is no benar
buy on tha Saanich Peninsula. See
it quickly with Irene Oalziei.
306-6164 or 477-6380.
CASTLE PROPERTIES LTD-
HORSES OR
CATTLE
3.54 ACRES
Large 44edroom farmhouse on the
Saanich Peninsula surrounded by
3V2 acres of gently rolling Msturc
land. This turn of tha Century
horn# with Its porch on three sides
is as solid as a rock. Ttw land
boasts excallent growing soli. New
M.L.S. offered at $89,900. Call
Irene Oaiziel, 316-6164 or evenings
477-6'»(0
CASTLE PROPERTIES LTO.
SOOKE
River Road area, cedar is the
theme for this newly completed 2
bedroom Panabode. Situated ert
welt tread acre view lot. Lerqa
sundeck. full roughed In basement,
wall to wkll carpet, Franklin fire¬
place. spiral staircase, open
beamed calling, wood frame win¬
dows. The price of $55,0(Xi Includes
-r. |Oow», me price 01 s^j.uuu tr
2444 Beacon Ave 'surfacing driveway 479-7911.
2A3 ror>rRY homf^s
AM) PROPERTItiS
tX>CNTOT nOMF^I
AND PROPERTIED
$39,900
A 2 Mdroom no basement home
r>3til in SooKe centre. 1he lot ts
Approx. ^4 acre and partially
■enced Covered oarbeque in back
yard. Good oardan area. This one
shouldn't last too lonp!
SOOK6 REALTY LTD.
a42-5426
n-IARACIER
RANCH STYLE
3 Bedroom home, huge kitchen,
dininq, famity room combined but .
there is also a nice sized livinp
room with fireplace and pood wait
10 wall. A good size weil-buiit
barn and separate garage in this 5
acres of good land secluded and no
noise. Price Slia.OOO AALS.
BUD ZUCK. VIC GOERTZEN, OR
JIM WALTERS. 344-1001
The Royal Trust Co.
Seoview Serenity
Gulf Island Views
REDUCED TO S75.000. Retir. to
this desireable pleasant country at¬
mosphere. Eniov the lifetime
ocean views from the 17x19 living
room and kitchen eating nook.
Two very spacious 8Rs plus a
dan. Abundant fruit trees on the
acre lot including 2 private wells.
bicok to the Experimental
Farm Park. MLS 17734.
346-2)11 ROY KAISER 477 ai3
MONTREAL TRUST CO.
Happy Valley
3407 DALLIMORE
NEW, 2,600 SQ. FT.
This tovaiy home on 2 view acres
must be sold. Vendor is forced to
consider all offers. MLS. $9^000.
R. Butler or M. Lund, 477-9S14,
652-2736, 344-6275, Pager 2113.
CENTURY 21—PRINCIPAL PRO¬
PERTIES LTD., 4064 Shalbourne
St._
immaculate’ 2 '- Y E A R - O L D,
4-bedroom ocean view home, 25
minutes from Victoria. 2 full {
baths, workshop, finished 300 sq.
ft. rumpus room, carpeted.
throughout, fireplace, sundeck«
rarpprt. 130,000, 10 <’o financing at
1240 per month. Could accept mo¬
bile home. RV. smafi cruiser,
older property or? as part down
payment. Appraised 152,900.
743-5005.
EAST SOOKE HIDAWAy
Charming 5 year old I bedroom
cottaae centred on 2.4 naturally
beatirul acres. Free standirfi
Franklin Fireplace gives focal
ooint to living room. Carpeted
throughout and offering complete
seclusion. Don't miss this race op-
portunhv. Asking 140400. MLS
14445 . RONA HIGGS 474-212) or
642-3835.
WATCRTRO-NT
J'ROPERTIKS
FARMER
roNiiuMirmTMs
nod TOWNHOESES
SiNd 1117
42S BAY
112-2134
HOBBY FARM
S ACRES
179,900
FREDDY STARKE
366-6164 or 479-3866
CASTLE PROPERTIES LTD.
* j ACRE COWICHAn’l’aKE WA-
terfront, 3 miles from Youbou. on
North Shore Road. 2 bedroom,
self-contained cabin, propane
tights, fridge, etc. fully land¬
scaped. 142,500. No agents,
382-^)262.
4 ACRES 'view PROPERTY
West of Elk Lake with 2400 sq. ft.
home. 1140,000. Principles only. 544
Starling Lane. 479-2796.
i.'Hi WATERFRONT
PROPERTIES
1000 Government St. t
COWICHAN
LAKE
NORTH SHORE
SOO sq. ft. Linda! cottage and 120
sq. ft. Panabode guest cottage lo¬
cated on approx. 1^2 Acre treed lot
with own creek plus 148 ft. Lake
front Beech. Mein cottage has liv¬
ing rm., dininq rm. with acorn
fireplace, kitchen with hot and
cold runnino water, woodstove. 2
bedrooms, and 2 place bathroom
Private hideaway and excellent
hunlino and fishing area. For pri¬
vate viewino phone:
GILES PERODEAU
3844124 656-4525
.^64-8124 MIKE PAGE S92-4364
MAPLE BAY
^PtMepn Victoria and Nan-
limo. Retirement j>aradise.
Marina nearby, treed ‘2 to 2
acres-, view lot.s. also wa-
lerfront lots. Mun. water,
paved roads. 2(Kr down
payment. Full price from
S19,000 up. Terms available.
NORTH PACIFIC T.AND
LTD.
Call office hrs.
Vancouver 687-2696
or Duncan 746-7983
MID-ISLAND
WATERFRONT LOT
Lovely trees, gentle slope to shel¬
tered rock beach, water, power,
paved road, near marina, almost
'7 acre and only 25 minutes north
of Nanaimo. Asking 143,900.
ALSO
Ocean view lots in same area
from in.SOO and up. Calf Mary
Campbell or Helen Stapleton at
Nanaimo Realty Co. Ltd. Box 511.
Nanaimo. B.C. at 754-2311 or eves.
46B-74U or 7^-1976.
Gulf Island Estate
Thetis island retirement parcel of
some 3 acres with 450 feet beach
frontage. A 2100 sq. It. rustic bun¬
galow, double garage and outbuild¬
ings. This property offers all ame¬
nities and professional services.
Price 1)75.000.
H. W. DICKIE LIMITED
70 Government St., Duncan B.C.
V9L 1A1
Phone 746-5171
WATERFRONT ^
MARK LANE
Almost 2 acres of lovely secluded
orcperty magnificent view over
Brentwood Bay. Beautiful 2.bed¬
room 2 bathroom Cedar Home with
many extras, almost completely
tinished 1137,000. Or try offer as'is.
Freddy Starke 386-6164 or 479-3866
CASTLE PROPERTIES LTD.
DEEP COVE
WATERFRONT
Extensively rebuilt 3 bedroom
Tudor home. Living room with
fireplace, separate dining room
Large sundKk and workshop.
Easy access to the beach with
moorage buoy tor your boat.
196,500. MLS 18164.
385-7721 -BtLL WEISS S984443
GARDNER REALTY LTD.
1000 Govcrnmeni ist.
8 GOOD
COUNTRY HOMES
METCHOSIN
1.4912 William Head Road, 2.6
acres, nearly j.uOO sq. ft.
finished living SMce, magnifi¬
cent view, i'n acres of GOOD
SOIL, well built 'armers cam. 1
A truly )st class HOBBY
HARM with top quality nouse.
For $137,500. MLS 18827.
2. 675 Tauros Road, 2 acres of.
land in the trees with a lovely
view over sea and mountains.
This 2-storey home - with a
train room in basement, has 4.
bdrms., large living and dining
rooms, beautiful natural rock
fireplaces and log boxes. 2
bathrooms, large rec. room and ,
bar, huge (approximately 600
sq. ft.) sundacks, tor onlv
198,000. MLS 16467.
3. 624 Libra Road (undar construe-'
tioo) 2'/3 acres, a LARGE SPA-
CIOUS and GRACIOUS HOME
with dalightful swimming pool,
hardwood floors, wra«-around
sundecks, HIGH CEILINGS, 3'
FP separate dining room, 31
bathrooms, 4 bdrms., 30x14^
workshop or billiard room, AWE '
INSPIRING VIEWS, this is a
beauty, 3.484 sq. ft. on 2 doors,
1135,000. MLS 16758.
HIGHLANDS
4. Martlett Drive — almost
I finished, mies from the
: Trans. Canada uo Midstream
' Road, 12.6 acres of trees, pas¬
ture and lake. Facing due south'
w^ have great views over the,
forests to the sea and moun¬
tains. Nearly 2100 sq. ft. of real¬
ly practical one level living
Lar%e fireplaces. 2, 3 or 4
hdrms., separate dining room,
20' living room, 20’ family
room, huge kitchen. You can’t
see it until you're on top of it,
but what a retreat! MLS 17769.
1134.000.
5. Millstram Rd. Last house (6
miles up from Trans-Canada) 10
Seres Including garden, pas¬
tures, good ridtng ring, 12 box
stall horse barn and timber,
Ideal for someone bringing up a
large family, rww Hydro Is up
here. An area of big (you can’t
see them) end small homes,
this is an exctllent investment
' or wonderful 2 to 4.Bdrm. home
I for the family. It wants a fire-
i Place in the livlnq room, but its
I warm as toast in the depths of
the courtfry In winter and only
13 miles from City Had. Add uo'
the components, It’s a bargain
at 1100,000. MLS 17251.
SAANICH
6. 4947 Old West Saanich — s
acres. This part old part new
home must be seen inside to he
aopreclaled The back of the I
home onto the oatlo and vMX)ds'
ts full of charm. 1 hdrms. 2
bthms., separate dinino room,
large entertaining room, kitchen
may be old fashioned but make
vour offer. Abo'it 2 acres In pas¬
ture behind the woods, 2 or
3-'-Ox stall horse ►•rn. rh'rken
house, etc. MLS 18766. 1155,000.
SHIRLEY OIST.
(Beyond Sooke)
7. Sheringham Point Rd. — 9 6
acres WATERFRONT. This im
posir >9 leg h4)use is the best l
have seen, 3 Bdrms., 2'/3 baths
study, massive stone fireplace
in 32x20 living room, ceiling un
near the sky. Full high concrete
basement, all nsodern conve¬
niences In -the kitchen the home
is desinged for Hs site and de-
sipned artd built really well. Its
out in the country but whaf a
Place! For 1175,000 yotj also oe*
the housekeepers ci^age and
large fruitful young orchard
t MLS. 16&52.
EAST SOOKE
RETIREMENT
WATERFRONT
8. ALMOST PERFECT
BEAUTIFULLY finished Inside
and out. Just the right size, 2
bdrms., 2 bathrooms, very,
very, comfortable, lovely out¬
look over the water and up the
Sooke River. Over ■') acre of
rich soil, many fruit frees and
Extra workshop wired and in¬
sulated. Ttw owners don't want
to give possession until Dec.
Lots of time to do your plan¬
ning. 107 Seagirt Rood, new
MLS 16992. 160,000.
Also I have several 2 ACRES. 10
ACRES and hiooer lots, ready
for building.- Flease call me, 1
will try not to be wanky,
DESMOND HOC7i4ES
394-8124 Res: 178-1227
"GARDNER'S
DELIGHT"
• (Ovpr 2 acres valuable
holding propert>''
Delightful ranch stj'le house
(appro.'K. 1.690 sq. f 1 .) with
heavy shake roof. This low
profile house, has a 9 ft.
high basement with 2 large
ntmpus rooms! The “En¬
glish Style (iarden” is im¬
maculate anti the vegetable
garden is bountiful. SKlo.OOO,
FOR FURTHER DETAILS
CALL
TREVOR MILSTED
392-2550 (Res I :»8-9172 (Bvis)
WATT.RFKONT
NORTH SAANICH
Owners leaving Coontry — anxious
to ba on their way. YOUR
CHANCE (and don't miss it) to {
buy this modern 3 Bedrm homo —
approx. 2.000 sq. ft. of living area
an 2 levels. On an outstanding .87 ,
acre of waterfront wilh cove and
private sandy, pebbled boach. Tre¬
mendous north westerly vievrs as
far as the eye can see! Warm
and sunny location towards west¬
ern end of Landsend Rd. You
don't have to go to Las Vegas to
hit the iackoot-Mt's right here
waling for yeui SO VIEW IT
AND MAKE YOUR OFFER on
the asking price of 1129,000.
(MLS).
WATERFRONT
NORTH SAANICH
2 side X side lots — located to¬
wards western end of Landsend
Rood. Nearly en ocre each —
superb views of Sea and Islands.
162,000 and 156.000. (MLS)
WATERFRONT
CITY
Long, low and loveiv » luxury 2
BR home in beautiful 10 Mi. Pt.
One of the finest on the market
today. An impresaivo 2J)00 sq. ft.
of space and eiegartce. On a beau-.
tifully landscape, fully fenetd Va
acre with sweeping views of ftie
Sea and Islands. 1199,S00.
For further information 00 the
above choice properties, please
call:
CBRRIE HLTf&N
38-2-2134 or 386-3927 I Res)
1000 Government St.
*1
FARMERS
ik.
TRUST
LOTS
Which provida 1.2 acres of
property with 188 feet of lake-
front plus a comfortable 3 bed¬
room home at Cowichan Lake
near Youbou. Askinp 183,000.
For further information please
call: DENNIS BERRY at
598-3344.
JACK MEARS
OAK BAY REALTY LTD.
BOAT PEOPLE
Anderson Cove, East Sooke. 2
ar''^s, 169' protective waterfront,
wharf, new 1152 square foot eoart-
nient over 10 ' hiqh concrete block
workshop. Existing small boat
business. 0 168.000 firm. Phone
642-3879. By owner.
BFAUTlFgt ACRE SEAV'FW
building lot In exclusive 10 Mile
Point aree. Quiet, wooded country
«eftinq vet onlv 20 mint>fe< from
downtown Victoria. Further de¬
tails write P.O. Box 5215, Station
B. Victoria.
SHAWNIGAN LAKE. 4 YEAR
eld. year round cottage, electric
heat, one bedroom, two steeoing
oables. 159,900. 471-7922 or 382-7I77.
“Rpal Estate Has A Prire"
'■Integrity Is Priceless”
7.71 Fort Street
SOOKE PROPERTIES
4 BEDROOMS
LARGE LOT
UHere'i a eaod eoHd family home
ctf Sooke River Rd. with over 1800
Sq. ft. of finished living aree. Nice
quiet area with a stream through
the back of the property. Asking
$43,900 M.L.S.
2. New Streta Duplex — 3 bed-
; rooms on main, finished rec-room
down with provisions for 1 more
bedroom. Large lot with seaview.
Good Value at 145,500.
:3. 21.9 cleared fenced acres. Otder
farm house on property. Views of
■t'-fia) M.'Ps.
4, 2 new 3 bedroom homes 141,500
end 148,900.
5. Saseenos Waterfront 2 bed¬
rooms, dining room ISO' of wa-
terfrontaqe. Asking 167,500.
Fore more informafion or to view
these or other Sooke properties
contact Bill Kozak at 386-6)64 ras
pe^i'esTtIT'
MINI FARM
Ranch style home in the big
trees on 3.8 acres of arable
land. Drive dow-n Hapyiy
Valley Rd. and look for my
Mini Farm Sign, if you like
what you see. call me. Ask¬
ing S95.000. MLS 19031.
386-8871 GRAE LANGSTON
386-8596
NEWSTBAD REAI,TY I.TD.
LP ISLAND EXECUTIVE
and large family home designed
^and constructed to take every ad¬
vantage of the tall trees, the wa-
. terfrom. Spacious living, dining
and family kitchan, the six beds
all face the waterfront. View. En-
I tertainment size family room and
'huge wrap'arouAd sundeck en 1.38
acres of grounds. Price only
1)50.000 MLl
1384-8001 BUD ZUCK S9| 7215
The Royal Trust Co.
OWNER MOVING
Looking for peaceful seclusion?
This Is far voul 16 miles from vie-
Itorra, 6-room modernized house on
. 16 plus acres, abundant water sup¬
ply, vour own natural park, large
.garden, fruit trees, etc. No reason
able oHtr refused. 642*3870 or
64273904.
WATERFRONT
CORDOVA BAY
. Spectacular saaviews combined
< with gracious living. Besutifuly
landscaped an treed. .31 acre lot
offering privacy and seclusion with
steps oown to a sandy beach. Resi¬
dence consists of living room, din¬
ing room, family room, den. 2 bed¬
rooms, and 2 full bathrooms, all
on one floor, designed to take ad-
I vantage of the breath taking sea-
t views. Ottered at 1115X100. To view
please call;
RANDY COLBERT
479-5932 385-9741
WATERFRONT
100x280
Over 2230 sq. ft. deluxe livino in
• riqmai Enqiisn designed execu¬
tive home built in 1937. Cul-de-sac.
between very exclusive homes.
Priced 1)»,000. Lots of extras: 1-
cedroum suite on 2nd floor, maids
quarters, view, etc. See this at 322
Plaskei PI. (Lampson and Munro),
ESQUImalt.
KEN IVERSEN — 477-5641
r, OF AN ACRE OF WATER-,
front with a beautiful partly
cleared building let. There is
water available and has a herd top
road. The frontage is ill ft. with
prectlcaliv no bank to the beach.
Full price 139.900 or give an offer.
Approx. 1000 ft. of waterfront In
Telegraph Harbour, where vou can
. have alt year round moorage.
There is approx. 9.5 acres. This is
a reel good buy end t)>e full price
Is 190.000.
Beautiful residential erea. in Sal-
lair, 61 ft. of sandy beach only a
tew steps brings you to the front
I door of this home with a view of
'Stewart Channel and island. Home
features 2 bedrooms, w-w carpet,
fireplace, a-c heat, boat house,
blacktop driveway. Included is a
one bedroom quest or rental cot¬
tage. Asking price 169,900.
PHONE ROSS ROOT 745-2124
J. H. WHITTOME 8 CO. LTD.
Box 120 Chemainus B C-
PHONE 246-3231
HONEYMOON BAY
RESORT —
LAKE COWICHAN
On Lake Cowichan, 29 miles west
of Ouncan. 10 acres ma''e or less
with some 1200 ft. df lake front¬
age and 1,CO0 tl. on Sutton Creek.
40 camp locations, and owners 3
cedroom residence, washrooms
and utility bldg. Double garage
and workshoo. Seclusfbn with natu¬
ral beauty and beautiful views,
•^or more Information call H. w
Dickie Limited 746-5171 and ask
lor PMI Lemare Eves. 746-5460.
H. W. DICKIE LIMITED
70 GovernmenI Street
Duncan B.C.
"We sell the island"
4.000 PT.
of sheltered waterfront with easy
access and 76 acres, with 25 acres
cleared and in pasture and fruit
' trees. Property is IdMl fbr a gen¬
tleman farmer, institution, sum¬
mer camping, scouts or guides.
Price is low at only $4500 per
ecre.
‘2 ACRE SEA VIEW LOT
Road and power to property has
arbutus trees, fir trees and some
rock but oreet possibilities tor
someone with imagination. Price
rnly SI4,000.
-‘1 BUD ZUCK 598-7215
The Royal Trust Co.
waterfront
S210.000
:».4 ACRES - 200’ REACT!
1212 Landsend Rd. will be open for
inspeefinn on Thursday. 26 Aug.
from 1:30 to 4:X P.m. See display
ad Wed Times — Thurs Colonist.
MR. YELLS 388-4271. RtS-383-5039.
J. H, WHITTOME and C^LTp^
JOHNS ISLAND
In the San Juans. 2 seo. properties
over 300 ft. frontage each. Asking
S29,7S0. Mary McGuire, Dorfha Va-
likoski:
395-8744 24 hrs.
DOUGLAS REALTY LTD.
SUITE 327 — 102 s INVERNESS
This )st rate 2 bedroom con¬
dominium of quality construction
and tasteful apxintments is open
to offers on ia 5,900 is the proud
owner's have already purchased
elsewhere. Viewing? At your con¬
venience. MLS 17489.
384-8124 MIKE SWEENEY 312-2709
384-8)24 MICHAEL VAUX 656-1287
pager 23)3 388-6375
MAKE AN OFFER
ROYAL WOODS — NO. 205, 1009
McKenzie
3 bedroom ensuitc condominium
frig., stove, dishwasher, w-w
thoroughout. Sauna, whirlpool. Bil¬
liard Room, swimming pool. Im¬
mediate possession, MLS 14353.
To view call:
384-8)24 O.E. WILLIAMS 385-9855
BEACON HILL
DELUXE CONDO.
$49,500
Situated In a tine Fairfield loca¬
tion near to Cook Street Plaza and
Park. This spacious 2 BR and 2
bathroom apartment home fea¬
tures 2332 sq. ft.
—2)x)3 LR. 11x10 D.R. quality car¬
pets and drapes included.
—Master bedroom is 16x13.6 in¬
cludes 3 pee. ensulte and king
sze walk-ln closet.
—Bright and cittery 3 way ex¬
posure, covered parking. Clear
title, extra facilities include Rec
Room with Billiards, Hobby
Crafts and laundry. M.L.S. 18976.
For your viewing arrangements
please cad:
C.A. CLIFF ANDERSON
384-8124 RES: 477-3994
PAGER 388-6275 — 2342
Qniuo^
PRINtaPALPIWPEimES
40M SHELBOURNE
477-9514
OPEN HOUSE
GORDON HEAD
NO. 25
4051 SHELBOURNE
SAT. 1:30-4
3 BDRM TOWNHOl'SE.
1,700 SQ. VT. OF SPACIOUS
LIVING. PRICED AT
S56.000. VOR PX’RTHER IN-
FORMATION PHONE
SCOTT MUNRO. 477-9514.
IRF^. I 477-2803.
rONPOMIMIMR
and TOUNHOrSES
Whyte &
Gower
Oak Bay Piap^ H taa 1.16.
2227 ()ak Kav K\*.
592-2107
GOT IT!
, Fantastic location
I Fantastic amenities
Fantastic prices
!... and the most Beautiful Suites
in town
2 bdrm. 3nd. floor 134,500
<1 bdrm. 1st. floor 132,500
II bdrm. 3rd. Ilopr 127.50D
1 bach. Isf. floor 122JBO
’ Call me at once 592-3537 or
592-2407 or visit me between
. 1:X-4:30 at
VILLA ROYALE
Leasehold Interest
, 964 Hcvwood Avenoue
) LORETTA HOGARTH
FAIRFIELD
Large, brand new sunny suite In
quality building close to shops and
on transportation Top floor, two
bedroom, 1*/*> bathroom, harvest
gold appliances and gualitv carpet¬
ing. Priced right at 144.500. Low
taxes and lew monthly mainte¬
nance. MLS 19235, Call ART BED¬
FORD 592-2407 or 592-2090.
OPEN HOUSE
Town Houses
Fri.-Sat. 2-4
rONDOMlMUMS
and TOWMIOUSE8
fSM
C'ONDOMINiriMR
and TOWNHOU8E8
CoiOlU0t Victoria. B.C., Sunday, August 22, L176
Sii* CONDOMINIUMS i i58 CONUOMIMUMS
and T0WNI1OII8K8
CONDOMINIUMS
and TOWNHOUSES
OPEN HOUSE
MONDAY THROUGH
FRIDAY 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. '
THE SAVOY
777 BI,ANSHARD -ST.
(AT McCLTTRE)
Prestige long-life' concrete
construction building right'
nOWNTOW74. These ai-e
tu.\urious apartment homes;
in a quiet dignified atmo¬
sphere. Underground park¬
ing. Excellent financing.'
•Studio one-bedrooms from
$3,3.000. Call 383-1821 or
477-8749.
A Pacific
FteALTY cm
ROCKLAND
SQUARE
949 Pemberton Rd.
The Only
Townhouses
"THE HILLSHIRE"
1525 HILLSIDE
AVE.
is the new lemtKirary office
of Knowles Realty Ltd..
"THE HILLSHIRE"
a NEW Condominium on
the market, ready in ap-
wmnoMES
111) BLANSHARD
CORONADA
1325 HARRISON
Available in this desirable area. i pro.ximately one week. Fot'
English AAanor styling, 3 BRs, Z''; thrw infprw«lpH in viAwinffi
baths, fireplace- large kitchens:*"^ inieresieG in \lewing, ...
with breakfast area. 7 TOP LINE these DIFFEREINT (5 de-ls Blocks East of Downtown Vic-
appliances, fenced courtyards. . rhno-^P from) O’er' corner suites with uti
Qualify carpeting and appoint '<> cnoone iromt, L7.>ie,,||,y suitable tor washer and
parking Landscaped and TWO bedroom condo- dryer and small deep freeze,
sprinklered grounds, 3 floor plans , 2-BEDROOM — liS noo
available, sohi* ..Basements, minium units. Peel free tO: open daily i:ooto 4;30
Investment’s Ltd.
383-4L24 anytime
Priced from $)08.000-S112,l.-.
Open for Inspection daily
Mon.-sat., 1:38-4:30 p.m.
To view by appointment phone
HERB McDANNOLD 595-1177,
GLEN McDANNOLD 595-6418, OF
FICE 382-9191.
New 2 Bedroom
$33,900
Best buv in tov*n. adult buildina.
located I’rj miles from city centre.
Appliances. drapes, carpeting,
parking and immadiate possession
»’ included. Up to 9B’''0 financing
available. Call HERB McDAN
NOLD 595-1177 or GLEN A6cDAN
NOLO 595*6488 or OFFICE
383-9191.'
Ted Radwav 477-6176
JoiManton 313-52)1
TOWNHOUSES
WITH FIREPLACES
$49,900
A fireplace makes a home Drive
over the bridge to 517 Dalton St
turn right at the Princess Patricia.
Come and compare the quality.
You are in for a surprisal
DAILY 1-4:30
(Except Sunday)
KEITH BRAID
.lACK MEARS
OAK BAY REALTY im '
"Tne Professional People"
Low Down
Payment
Three bedrooms, 2 bathrooms,
basement, laundry area, covered
parking, fridge, stove, dishwasher,
feature walls, quality carpets,
drapes., double glazed windows.
Located in James Bay, close to
wateriront. boat ramp. park,
school and shopping.
101
ST. LAWRENCE ST.
3M-391I 0, SK..4»
COLONY PARK
MANOR
1680 POPLAR
STREET
$34,000
Really nice condominium. 789 sq.
ft. well located. All amenities close
by. Hydro Therapy Pool, Sauna,
Whirlpool, Hobby Room and Rec.
Room. For viewing call:
BUD WALKER
381-6454 478-7430
TOWNHOUSE
$59,900
This is a quality unit, that has
approx 1600 SQ. ft. There are tnree
bedrooms, three bathrooms, living
room with fireplace, dining room,
plus family room. There Is loads
of storage space and the units ere
completely soundproof. It is very
dost to the University, buses,
shopping etc. To view this special;
concept call me at any time.
J. F. COLWELL
3as.MS, in-9m
REALSPAN
PROPERTIES LTD.
2,10 CC»K STREET '
A Unique
Luxury Complex
PRICED FROM $70,500
-2 BDRM, ^ FULL BATH
CORNER SUITES,
minimum 1365 sq. ft.
spectacu'ar viaws
-6,STOREY CONCRETE AND
STEEL BLOG„
-4V, ACRES OF LANDSCAPED
GROUNDS
—GUEsr HOUSE offaring;
7 an suitt bdrms
rec^ion facilitlas 'v.
large Indoor swimmlnt peel,
saunas.
BUY DIRECT FROM BUILDER
OPEN TUES. THRU FRI 9-4
For appolntmtnt call 384-4013^
598-1060
Danzo and Franco Holdings Ltd.
ORCHARD
HOUSE
Sludio from $22,100
1 Bedroom from $28,000
2 Bedroom frMii $.37,200
CHAMPAGNE
PARTY?
PHONE FOR MORE
INFORMATION
AND A PERSONAL INVITATION
dro)) in betwo’en:
10:00 to 5:00
Monday to Saturday, or
[thone
384-8101
fur an appoinlrnoni. fo view
at other times.
$28,700 to $42,000
OAK BAY
1X>WNHOUSK
$55,500
Attractive r.©dar siding and
OPEN 5-7-30 n m PP™«‘
niC... TLm .'■o '■nurtyard; this two- Llyinj mre oives you « fMlina rf
ri’yV ‘riS'o available for in>, ’Jri'uUr'oJi;
' "’ablate imesession. AskinK I cJSa™ Roikl.sS
"AM'mawV T gray LAlTE ^^-SflO with appliances in- ^
eluded. To view call
I’k'EN PORTER I
.384-8101 656-5235! J
383 3866
38l'437t
1 656-5267 or offict 382-9191.
Dallas Rd.
LUXURY
$58,000
anytime, or Ras. 595*2154.
I. G. LIDSTON'E
Elegant 2-bdrni suila with superb
ocean view. Large sep. dining
room, kitchen with eating area,
marble type fireplace, very well
priced. ML. SOPHIE HARDER.
477-0)41 or 382-9903.
Condominium
Large )-bdrm unit with swimming
pool, hydro and sauna. Choice lo¬
cation near University. Priced af
$33,500. AAL 18)92. Call ELSIE
O'BRIEN. 477-0141 or res. 477-5470.
The Savoy
Walk to work and shopping. Luxu -
ry living can be yours with the se-
'curity of a concrete building in
j downtown Victoria. Spacious bright
2-bdrm with ensuite, ample
< storage, double balcony, fridge,
range, dishwasher, drapes and un¬
dercover parking. All included at
$63,900. View by calling HERB
.McDANNOLD. 595-1177 or GLEN
McDANNOLD. 595-6488 or office
' 383-9)91.
Canada Permanent
Trust Company
(@reen
^cres
as '
oilsisyiiGaDif
H. WHITTOME an^CO. LTD.
TOWNHOUSES^
EXCITING
AND
BEAUTIFUL
AT A PRICE
YOU CAN AFFORD
Located at 133 Ontario Slraef.
'James Bay, .near Laurel Point end
Fishermao'y wharf.
j Unique high quality 7 and 3-bed¬
room homes orovldinq maximum
orivacy, individuality and conve-
' nience.
' FEATURING:
—Private patio, very large master
bedroom, larqe private balco¬
nies.
—Beautiful 3rd floor studio, some
. - .. .. with skylights.
You won't believe this unique buyl ’ —Heatilator fireolace. deluxe
A spotless 1000 sq. ft. 2 bedroom stove, fridge, dishwasher,
unit with dinette, laundry, all ao- , —Minimum strata corporation In-
pliances. sun in the morning and volvemenf (only 3 other owners).
aHernoon plus acres of grass and |-^-Trades considered — liv»% fl-
trees. Many, many extras and only nancinq.
$44,900.
DAVE RANSON 385-9741 OPEN DAILY 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
FROM $6) .900
CONDOMINIUM ” ^ hakJ.construction
3!/2 Percent
Exclusive Residential
VILLAGE GROVE
TOWNHOUSE
MAGIC!
371 ISLAND HIGHWAY
UNIVERSITY OF
VICTORIA
$48,800
.3 BEDROOMS
•2 BATHR(X)M.S
$23,500
Exciting )-bedroom suite. Co¬
loured appliances -- new car¬
pets and drapes. Try buying
instead of renting. It costs no.
more. For details call; BETTY
McFARLA-ND or PHYLLIS
COUTTS at 598-3344.
7 EXECUTIVE
TOWNHOUSES
1740 Kntght Ave. off Richmond Rd.
3 bdrm. 3 bathrm. livina rm.. and
dining rm. with fireplace, large
kitchen with eating area. 7<ar
parking, close to U-Vic and hospi¬
tals, shopping, bus route etc.
Priced from $59,900 with IO-a*** fi¬
nancing availlabie.
OPEN HOUSE
EVERY DAY
TO 7:30 P.M.
For further information call Don
Oakes <78-4334. Rodger Trail
479-8847.
BICKERTON
COURT
PRACTICAL LUXURY can be
yours in this large 3-bedroom con¬
dominium, across street from Bea¬
con Hill Park and onlv a short
walk from Dallas Road. Large
swimming pool. Indoor, also, root
promenade deck and view room.
For entertaining a Polynesian
room is available. Suite is wall-to-
wall throughout. Plenty of parking
available, either under cover or
open. Asking $67,500 but offers in¬
vited. For more information or to
view call:
0. DOUGLAS or E. WILKINSON
382-4251 (anytime)
RITHE1 AGENCIES LIMITED
McKKNZIE AVE.
Op«t 2-8 Daily
^ turd ay 1-6
Sunday 1-6
647 Michigan St.
382-82.31 .382-82.32
. One large living room, t¥vo bed-
kTO. rooms, dining room, nook for
washer-drver. Southerly aspect Don't miss this. Only on# leH
with large balcony. Includes facill Brand new- and extremely attrac-
liYIPT QT 7B4 Q'jqR ' 1*- i®* 9«m#s room.'fiwa 3-storey brick and stucco
ooa runi ai. .MH-addo whirlpool, sauna, bicycle room, townhouse In a loveiv resWentiai
Close to UVic and Racquet Club, area off the beaten track but with-
liORD SELKIRK »r^ 1" o^ck and easy reach of down-
AXrtt .VTAT AIV intMi-c V.C. WOODWARD town Victoria. Front lawn with
MOUNTAIN VIEW.S 315-9741 (anytime) i hedge. Rear veranda and patio.
Facing west with oustanding views
of llw Sooke Hills, this top floor
condominium has all the amenites
required for gracius living. 3 bed¬
rooms, spacius living and dining
areas wth transom lights in the Three bedroom, bath and half, L. .- - ..—
ceiling. 2 large patios for summer excellent condition and close to' ll- immediate possession. (ML)
living. Washer and dryer In tne everything. Asking $44,900. Stove 386-7521 JOHN Pl-AT'r_ 383-2700
CONVENIENT
TOWNHOUSE
Richly carpeted throughout. ...
tractive stairway with white and
gold wrought iron rallino. Big
bright kitchen with fridge, stove
and dishwasher. Beautiful 6-ft. long
. bathroom mirror. Approx. 1200 so.
McKKNZII
DELUXE S-BDRM.
TOWNHOUSE
3r>8 CONDOMINIUMS
and TOWNHOUSES
DOWN PAYMENT
$2,500
This 3 bedroom, extra bright
corner suite has 1177 sq. ft. Large
^ving room and dining room.
Extra large belcony with southern
exposure Large storaot room in
unit. Within 1 block of rec centre
and shopping centre. New stove
and fridge included. Priced lo sell
at $42,500. MLS.
385-7721 KENT MacLEOD 595-4273
GARDNER REALTY LTD.
' TOWNHOUSE
$37,500
For a 8 bdrm., 1V!» bath town-
house, this is best buy in Victoria,
j II is end unit, pool is close bv. and
children are welcome. Etrlv oc¬
cupancy. Wilfred Davis 479-1667 or
I 658-1184.
! J. H.
Close to University. On main
floor: 13x16 living room. B'.sx
)1W dining room — 11 x 13 family
room with fireplace. Ail expensive-
: ly carpeted. Secluded patio. Elec¬
tric kitchen and heating. 2 pee.
bath and laundry room. UP: 3
good sized bedrooms—master bed¬
room Il*'^xl2'.^ — 4 pee. bath.
Carprt plus one extra parking
space. tl'' 2 % mortgage Interest.
Asking $55,500. For further infor¬
mation, please call:
595-5171 DIRKOKKER 478-450)
CANADA TRUST
FOR THE YOUNG
AT HEART
AAove up to luxury with a dif¬
ference. Royal Woods suite now
available, it's called a studio, but
it has 700 sc. ft. of delightful living
with sleennq loft end lots or
rooms — swimming pool, sauna,
billiard room, tennis courts and all
for the asking price of $43,000.
MLS 19193. Call:
LESLIE BOHER
TERRY SMOLLETT
318-6275 (PAGER 729)
598-1665 595-5171 656-5812
CANADA TRUST
"People Helpir>g People "
'IDWNHOUSE
3BDRM FAMILY ACCOMMODA-
1ION FOR ONLY $36,000. NEAR
NEW W-W CARPETING IN THE
LKM. AND DRM. )■/> BATHS. 3
STORAGE ROOMS. PRIVATE
PATIO. ACCESS TO SWIMMING
POOL.
JOE RICKARD 656-1628
LEC PEARCE 386-3M6
or JIS-8771 (anvt*me)
7-4391 TORQUAY
A SPACIOUS (954 sq. H. on the
main). LiKE NhY/. only 5 stePS-
Aimost completely detached END
UNif. with HUGE secluded front
and back yards. 3 bedrooms,
master ensuite, handsome fire¬
place. color co-ordinated carpets
ano wallpaper. DOUBLE CAR¬
PORT detached. View of Mt.
Douglas. sciKMis and recreation
close bv- Best buv in town at
$59,900 (MLS), includes new stove
and fridge. Jack Kennlsh, Vic¬
toria Real^ Ltd., 386-3585, 479-3061.
‘ FAIRFIELD
DELUXE CONDOMINIUM
'Strata Title-Quiet area — 1 vr. old
— close to Beacon Hill and down¬
town — 2 bdrm. — master en suite
— custom drapes — large patio
1 bik. to bus — 2 biks. to shopping
— lots of closets, cupoowds and
storage ~ top corner of 4-storev
bldg. — covered parking, recrea-
, tion room, work room, laundry, el-
evator. controlled entrances.
Priced realistically a) $48,900.
Phone 312-2211 (nrtoms. or eves.)
OAK BAY TOW’ERS
BY OWNER $31,900
Owner must sell larqe I bedroom '
suite in this prestige bulldino at ,
1400 Newport, beautiful gardens,
near marina, sea front and village.
. Clear title but will carry large .
mortgage if needed. Priced at
I thousands less than other listed
suites In this building, sacrifice'
:sale. 477-8274.
STARTERS-AS LOW
AS $1,000 DOWN
New 2,bedrm condominiums in
Sunny Sooke.
OLIVE WEBBER
: 3864231 314-9267
GAIL JENKINS
‘478-556 ) 478-6458
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
I VIEW OVER CITY ANO INNER
{harbour from Mt. Baker to Sooke
Hills, this 1 bedroom suite located
I 2 blocks from downtown Is profes¬
sionally decorated. $35,000 includes
many extras for vour comfort. As¬
sume existing mortgage of approx¬
imately $37,000 at 10%, $239 per
I month, if needed second mortgage
. at t3%. To view call 315-8959 morn¬
ings or evenings.
Onuk
rr
21
RlXTiSTATi
J. D. aOSOET LTD
120 - 727 JOHNSON 386-3128^
unit, storage on same floor plus fridge include,
sauna, whirlpool and rec area. C. ARNOLD
(MLS 17401) Easy terms. Asking J- McCORMACK
$46,900 * -
DON ROBBINS
384-9335 384-9072
NO FRILLS
JUST VALUE
I!
FARMER
TOWNHOUSE
Must be sold — 3 Bedrooms. 1'.
Bathrooms. Absolutely spotless
condition, w-w carpet. Living
and dining room. Secludad oatio.
MLS 172)7. Asking $47,900. Make an
offer.
Open House
Sat. 2-4
FAIRFIELD
No. 103-1 145 Hilda
When you buv this condominium
home you arc not paying for
saunas and swimming pools vou
will never use but will add to the
cost of upkeep. You will get a
home as large as many houses.
1)41 SQ. fl. it has a 22'/jxl4'.j fool
living room, dining room, kitchen M4 iav cTpepT
with stove and fridge, in house siKtti
storage area and 3 bedrooms,
master bedroom wHth waik-ln clos¬
et. Monthly upkeep only $28. Close
lo shops and transportation on Ad-
: mirais Rd. near EsQuimalt Rd. on
the inner quiet side of the build¬
ing. Offers on $37,500. -i.. ....
477-1841 RON KERFOOT 652-2894 This third flw Suite has an eatmg
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD kltcf^ and separate dm-
.... — ...-- . mg room, This is a fantastic one-
$34 500 I bedroom suite with many extras
t Iluinii dtsign IS quit# different
1 i!l?i'.‘lil* conventional unit giving
'"‘tch charm. Of course there is
can V3U swlmminq pool, billiard room,
__ .'sauna, swirlpool, library, tennis
DELUXE UNIT
ROYAL WOODS
$37,900
BOORAAAN INVESTMENT ' CO-.
LTD,
1111 Government St.
' WHATA PAIN!“
Renting can be a real headache,
and unless your hobby is cdllectlnq
rent receipts, consider this out
standing buy in a t-bedrm con
dominium. It's a toe floor, corner
suite in Gordon Head, only min¬
utes from K-Mart. UVIC and Mt
Tolmie. and bus service is at tna
decr. Four great amenity areas
including sauna and workshop.
This 24Hin!t boltding is CMHC ap¬
proved and should oualifv for 90%
... financing. And here's the best parfi
383-2)34 Asking price $34,500 (MLS).
JIM TYLER
385-7761 24 hrs.
D. F. HANLEY AGENCIES LTD.
UVIC TOWNHOUSE
SUPER BUY ON THIS 3 RED
ROOM QUIET END UNIT WITH
PRIVATE BACKYARD. 2
BATHROOMS, KITCHEN IN-
CVUOES 3 APPLlAN(fES. SFPA
RATE DINING ROOM, LARGE
LIVING ROOM AND A COZY
595-5171 DOU^G POSKITT 477-0645 0|N WITH'-F'IREPLACE. MAIN-
CANAOA trust ong of the finest on today's mar-, TENANCE ONLY ^M.OO MONTH_
CHECK THIS!
OLYMPIC vn:w
RUDYARD KIPLING
BEACH DRIVE
$75,000
Offering very gracious living ac¬
commodation. Very large LR end
DR, 2 spacious bedrooms plus 2
full 4.piece baths. Very functional
complete kitchen with dishwasher,
stove, irldge. Building is best rein¬
forced concrete construction, it's
not often to have a chance to buv
Into this building. For appointment
phone 592-7603.
CAREtTlEE BAaiKI/>R
TRANSFERRfi) END OF
AUG.
Must sent i-bedroom con¬
dominium. Sauna, swirlooot,
lounge, billiard room, hobby and
exercise room. 770 sq. H. 1025 In¬
verness includes stove, fridge and
dishwasher. New MLS Onlv
$32,900.
JOHN MORRY 384A001 or Res
592-9770 The Revil Trust Co.
'Deluxe 2 bedroom adult oriented
buildlnq, near Beacon Hill and
'downton, spacious rooms, P'?
.baths, plentiful closets and in suite
c A o rt \i MPAn ^torag#, top floor (4th) corner
ThT«? II suite. One year old building with
Three bedrooms, P 7 baths, rec.'rAr f-oom. hAbOv rAom rAn.
room, fireplace, swimming pmI,: trolled entrance, covered parking
sauna. Wide open feeling, facing sja sao lao.sTOi
open fields, great tor kids. Walk fo ***'*^'
UVic and other schools One of the Tr\\A/K.l Ur$l ICC
best for thousands less than the I L,/WINriL/Ujt
others J*) »«,0pp, Nei^ ‘ attractive. 2 bedroom. W.W.,
more? KEN McCANDLESS, KASA- carpet In spacious living room and
PI CONS. CO., 386-6191, 478-4^. {Master BDRM. NIcelv balcony
-Appliances included. Call us re¬
garding down payment required.
$29,900 MLS. 18873.
R. JOHNSON W. MICHAELS
RITHET AGENCIES LIMITED
714 Fort Street 382-4251
2 BR.
SEA VIEWS
Immaculate and large top floor,
3-bdrm suite with south easterly
seavlews. plus a- roof top sundeck
Three-vear-old building near Bea¬
con Hill Park and Dallas, just e
great area. New MLS at onlv
$46,900.
477-1841 JEFF CHALK 477-8274
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
LUXURY CONDOMINIUM, TOP
floor, Spencer Castle. Over 1300
square feet, 2 bedrooms. 2 full
bathrooms, kitchen, dininq room,
lounge. Faring South-West. Swim*
mine pool, sauna, 7 rooms for
owner's guests. Acres of garden.
AAonthly assessment, $58, including
heat and wafer. For salt by
owner. $77,000. Phone after 3 p.m.,
386-9605. Daytime phone 598-4332.
DELUXE TOWNHOUSE. RE-
duetd from $46,000. 1150 •quare
feet, P 7 bathrooms, 3 large bed¬
rooms. large storege room, galley
kitchen, lots of cupboards, dining
room, lounge, fully carpeted, slab
patio with flowerbeds, fridge and
stove, private parking, available
early October Mortgage $27,000 at
tt%. Total now $42,000 . 656-3661.
Sidney.
DELUXE ONE LEVEL
TOWNHOUSES
Adult oriented with two Br., front
and rear patios, fireplaces, appli¬
ances, rec room with sauna, swirl
pool, pool, billiard table. Beautiful-
tv landscaped grounds. (>nlv 18
units on two acres. Open for view¬
ing anytime. Priced from $57,900.
Phone 477-7071.
BY OWNER
Well built Fairfield con¬
dominium, top suite. Olympics
view. 7-bedroom, I’A baths, lots of
space, walkinn distance tn park,
sea and shopping. $54,700. 384-7994
CONDOMIUM, PANORAMIC SEA
view, on 2 acre lot at Mill Bay.
$38,000. New condition. For in¬
formation 743-2101.
DELUXE TOWNHOUSE. 3~BED-
rooms. 2 bathrooms. University
area. By owner. 479-4164 after 5
p.m.
BY OWNER CLARENCE HOUSE-
2-bedroom luxury suite. Baautifuiiv
drrorxieb s anpliances. 167.500
471-581$ after 1:30 p.m. ^
Superb 2-bedroom home, located
on main floor of adult-oriented
condominium, i^iet and little traf¬
fic. Auster bedroom (en suite).
(large patio off living room-dining
room. Top-tine appliances in bright
kitchen. Excellent carpeting
throughout. Covered parking. Price
now reduced to $43,900. Make an
appointment today to view this;
it's so convenient to downtown, fo
buses, to shopping. BOB ORTER.
S98-6143 or 385-2481. MLS No. 18209.
TOWNHOUSES
IN
PASSMORE PL.
Open to View on
Sat. and Sun. (12 to 6 p.m.)
Closed Friday
Phase 3—
1 only 4-bedrQem at $49,500
Phase 5—
1 only 4.bedroom at $51,300
(with carport)
3 only 3-Opdroom at $51,900
(with careort and extra large
master bedroom)
Phone 479-8511 or turn off Inlerur-
Can to Columbine and follow the
Passmore Place signs.
NO YARD "work. STRATA Du¬
plex. Lovely view overlooking city.
On quiet street opposite Wilderness
Park. 2''7 years old, over 1700
square feet developed. Large,
bright family kitchen with sliding
doors to southern balcony. Floor-
to<eiling fireplace In living room.
.Luxurious carpet, champagne
beige throughout. 3 bedrooms, V /3
baths, also office space, laundry
facilities, good storage, carp^,
and spacious entry. Best of all,
small no maintenance yard. Good
financing, trades considered. 4 ap¬
pliances. $55,900. Open house Sun¬
day. 1:30-^30 p.m. 1257 Kings
Road. 383-1S40.
SPACIOUS
1 BEDROOM
$32,500
If you've b^n looking for a large
1 bdrm. suite in a convenient loca¬
tion. at a low price "slop" here it
is. Extras include billiard Rm.,
swirlpool and sauna and more, to
view call Rick O'Kane. Bus.
386-6)64, Res. 386-6357.
Castle Properties Ltd.
marquee'courT
OAK BAY
Elegant Oak Bay area for retire¬
ment. in this 1-bedroom con¬
dominium. Features new w-w car¬
pet with a view offfront lawn and
I shrubbery. Situated near front en-
I trance on main floor. Easy access
to bus. shopping and 5 minute
walk to Sealand and park, very
quiet and lovely 6-year-old retir-
ment home at $32,500.
477-1841 JIM KRAHN 3844143
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
.VBebR(X)M TOWNHOUSE
HIGH LOCATION
Brand new home In High Quadra
district in small 5-unit complex.
baths. Good wall-to-wall car¬
peting. Top line appliances.
Storage, veranda and Patio.
(MLS1. Phone for details. $48400.
j LEVERTON REALTY
I :i8!>,«0t3
$46,700
LARGE 2-BDRM. APT.
Close to town. On good bus ser¬
vice. This excellent unit of 1200 sg.
ft. has fridge, stove, washer,
dryer. Included. 1V^ baths. 2 en¬
trances. Don't delay, call today:
595-5171 DOUG POSKITT 477-0645
CANADA TRUST
ket. For further informatio'n Please '
ceil: .MISS THIS. BRIAN RIPLEY BUS:
ItAA \A/CCT 592-243) RES: 598-5643. LANS-
J!/V\ Wtb I OOWNE PROPERTIED
595-4094 BY OWNER, 2 Ve^ROOM^C^N-
dominiijm ter sale. Fridoe. stove,
washer, dryer, drapes. Take o-'er
. mortgage. Located on Burnside
[$27,900. For more Information
. 386-7345. anytime.
TOWNHOUSE
3 BEDROOMS
$49,500 MLS
immaculate townhouse
This centrally located retirement with a full basement in a well-kept
.. suf -1 complex with a heated swimming
home is ground level
shrubs and trees giving an atmo-.end unit with above average soui^.
sphere of complete privacy and proofing and privacy. P/j baths,
seclusion. Two bedroom (large I Three good-sized bedrooms uo.
master with en suite) L-shaped liv- Kitchen with eating area plus din¬
ing room and dining room, lots of ing room, living room and full
closer space plus a building with basement. Fenced yard and patio
many leisure facilities including a (area. To view this fine townhouse
please call
JIM WEST
382 2134 S95-4094
$55,900 SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE
near University. 3 bedroom. !’•*
baths, plus family room with flre-
nlace.
Bowden Realtv 313-5524 ( 24 hr$.1
WATERFRONT, BEAUTIFUL
view, 1 bedroom apartment, stove
and fridge, carpet, cablevision,
SICiOO down $30,000 full price.
642-390J.
NEAR^UVIC
3-bedroom townhouse. 1,800 sg. ft ,
1 '^ baths, rec room and sewing
room in basement, carport. Asking
$52,000; evenings 477-5593.
BEAUTi’FU ~3NEVeDROOM ~—
Beacon Hilt, 3rd floor, saunas,
swirls, roof rop oaieur. covered
parking, deluxe throughout.
$31.^. 382^2.
DELUXE "S-B E D R OOM' ^OWn"^
house. University area. 853.000.
477-6407 after 5.
263 OARAGES PX>R SALE.
RENT OR WANTED
NEED STORAGE TpaCE?" I
OWNER TRANSFERRKD [-E«lly > bMroom, I™"'! m'JrTrw.'”''
An opportunity for advancement so I ?^2|ex* ** I "LOCKING-—rTpIri—vuTwren
the owners must reluctantly offer
■hi! lmm«cul>t« 4;monlh<,J ” Nl *.rd .SSi. .Jw Jt . Ik)«I. _
bath, sauna, hobby room, hospi- *65
talitv room and underground
narking.
.- - - . _ large existing
mortgage. An excellent value at ’***^'^'*
$53,900. MLS 19161. Phone ter an _ ... _...
appointment to view: T/'Mi/kTi-j/Sri Yc'cc suitable for rental or’rwtovaVlon
J86.6796 JOHN BUNYAN 383-7777 I OWNHOUbcS 1 For immediate inspec^n and
MiTAtJ 'TIJIT CITA centre of the city — 4 only, <J»v decisions, cell'
NhAK IHEbbA _ professionally landsceped ori-' R|| 1 r*ARMF(^IF
Watch the Princess Margarite vafe courtyards-— interior design, . . IN CLJi u
steam into the harbor from your < by L. PrevosI — central halls — 3 ; 385-7761 24-nr$. 652-3627 Rea.
own roof terrace. This unique bathrooms — wood burning tire-; ' ^
3-bedroom townhouse In James places and many unique extras. HANLEY AGENCIES LTD.
Bay puts you near tennis courts' Priced from 159,130. Serious
land bus as wen. Brand new and buyers may directly contact:
asking in the very low $50s. Your --
; down payment may be high
enough or bridge finance the Cana-
<da Trust way. M.L. 19171.
1595-5171 ROBDANIELSEN 595-4482
I CANADA TRUST
I roof top garden. Well priced at
'$45,900. MLS 18849.
595-517) (Anytime)
RICK KALLSTROM
Ci^AOA TRUST
OAIOEANE
710 LAMPSON ST.
2 bedroom corner suite in adult
block. Stove, fridge and garburator
included. No pets. Quick posses¬
sion below replacement cost at
$35,900, good financing. To view
please call
386-7521 DELHOEGI 3834516
BOORA8AN INVESTMENT CO.
LTD. ,
1111 Government Sf.
848 ESQUIMALT ROAD
$31,000
house for sale. Feeturing 3 bed¬
rooms. P'S baths, large living
room, dining room plus eating
area in the kitchen, patio and car -1
pon. There is a large j|ff poLLITT
HOUSES WANTED
TO BUY
ALL CASH
PRESTIGE COUNTRY 1 Could be obtained for vour home If
joyers n . ...
G. 8 M. BUTLER BUILDERS
382-7422 oi^4W-M16
GOOD VALUE!'
MUST BE GORGE
OR BURNSIDE
UNIQUE INDEED
tr and dryer included. For more
S etails and viewing please call
rant MacFarlane, 386-3585. Vic¬
toria Real^ Ltd.
BY OTODR
With Views
Only two blocks to Dalles and
shopping centre. Spacious 1 bdrm
bit of sea view. 3rd
colored
NEW USTING
Would you not like the use of a
iRooi. -MR"*. I
viewing ,
WHY PAY RENT?
TvM-bedroom condominium, L-
shaped livino and dining room, all
{carpet, laundry and storege room,
I fridge. stove. washer. dryer,
drapes. Outside playground and
I swimming pool. $2l.06o. 477-4953.
Only 3 townhouses In this group. 3
BR. fireplaces, balconies, full
basements, closed In garages, lots
of yard, blacktop drive, you can
even see the water in the distance.
$ 10,000 down payment will handle,
and get B.C. 3nd. Call RENE
I BOURDIN now at
477.1841 642-4)50;
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
— i suite
floor, western exposure,
appliances. Vacant fo
27.500. For
billiard room, loui^e, tannTs I 592- 3Q80 or 598-2330.
court? All fhia plus a spotlessi hohcp
spacious 2 -bedroom corner suite 7 ° .1
a modern l-y#ar.bld condominium, i •»" ^
Best of all It has been priced tor a j ^
quick sale at 8^.900 MLS t 9 ) 9 i pert basement-. Electric heatT 2
M647te ^HN BUNYAN m -7777 C'?,** lo^Simpwns^Sears
WESTMONT REALTY LTD. and Universffy Open to trades
♦20 HILLSIDE
SU-ATM I SS2.900.00
--...- .. Phone now Doris Adams 591-1113
UNIVERSITY AREA DELUXE'Charman Pacific RMity 385-9765
3-bedroom townhouse, open house • .- -
Saturday, Sunday 10-1705 Feltham, 1 ALAAOST NEW
477-2863. ! 1 bedroom concrete construction
: condominium, fridge and stove.
EXECUTIVE 2-BEDROOM. 3 ! wall to wall. Tiffany lamps and
bathroom, sauna, whirlpool. Esoul- ' close to town. Priced to sell at
malt area, 656-a7S. 1 $39,500. 386-1600.
Middle aged couple would like to
3 bedroom condominium, offered' re-locate closer to town. They need
for sale at the low low price of:a 2 bedroom full basement home
$40,500 or offers, low monthly)with room for a dining suite. Will
maintenance fee, frig, stove, wash- Pay up to $55,000. Cash. Call Chrit
for quick or 316-6)64.
Greig. 386-6)64 or 479-7995. CAS'
^E PROBITIES LTD.
THIS LAbywILL^
BUY
Urgently requires a small rental
or two or three suites where
$15,000 investment will cover mtae.
without subsidizing. Up to teO.Wb
H necessary. Ben Greig. 598-3105
_^Castle ^ooertles Ltd.
VIC west'
I live In vour neighborhood and
will consider purchasing vour
home, or selllng^it for you. In ei¬
ther case you get the bast sarvica
in town. Call Gerry Flnnlgan
W-atae, (24 hrs.) or res. 383-4739,
CASTLE PROPERTIES LTD
SMALL
FAMILY
I bedwm hon-
Require 3 or 3 bed?&m home
praferably with only a few steps.
Up to $59,000. Will be cssh tq ven
dor. Urgent. Iran# Dalziai 477 6380
386-6164. CASTLE PROPERTIES
LTD,
50 fiDdilp Colonist Victoria. B.C. S'lnday. A>igusl 22, 1976
265 HOUSKS U ANTEII 1271 I.OTS FOB SALK 2*S PROPERTY FOR SALE 2W ACREAGE FOR SALE
INSTANT CASH
InTtstor will pay on the spot
CASH for homes In need of repair
for rental purposes. Up to S 4 O, 0 Q 0 .;
Call Bob Kohlruss, S98-7M9 or,
CASTLE PROPERTIES.
LTD.-- . _ .
YOUNG COUPLE
With approx. S10.000 ^ down are,
lookino for a solid 2 -bedroom, home
up to 135,000 In the flreater Victoria
area. If vou can help phone Tom l
RBlo at Castle Properties, 3W-ai64
o r jl3-98 3».
aVEWIU^BUY
FOR CASH
3lo6maJGu.
1000 Govemment St.
It voor home Is suitable for rental^ BRENTWOOD BAY ' lovsiv wooded DrOD- THESE ARE ALL
Awl will show a. raturn call Jhe.yy^ «ver*l lullv serviced . ^ . T.., . QUALITY PIECES
SEABOARD
PROPERTIES LTD.
7173 WEST SAANICH RD.
BRENTWOOD PAV *52-1141
REALTY LTD.
5« Haetioa S 4 . Bw. 313-051
ARDMORE DRIVE:
Golf and the Beach
and Park practically
'At your doorstep',
three-quarter acre of.
quick deci
•tna will . -
mies supervisor for
wall & Redekop Really
3*5'791t or 3B4-3912
;We have several fully serviced, . . ■ ^ j -ii j
'lets, ready to build on. Some tread, lertV includeS drilled
isesviews or all cleared.
lady investor
Pricea from «B,«IO.S3S.OOO tOflers well With QOOd Water
iSj.'iui Aivicke,, supply, 119 tt. road
Z . ^frontoge, a quality
2riSrr^fLr"#R?PER“iE”S; environment. Price
««,«. CASTLE fRO^E , ,J, cn^Ee.L,,,u;^cuM.S.C ^ GRAY LO-
383-4151
iTaRGE SECLUDED LOT, QUIET,I homes. ^ PPKI7FM
Pelrtield. Rockland. Oak Bav .'2 Waterfront lot on Sirathjione Bai^. KCINZ.CIN
Cider house 3-4 bedrooms,
«fS,000 cash. 383-8657.
up to
(not
buildinq
or 652-1038.
acre
, *19,500. - - -.
iSTNTED by' private BUYER.,’ JS “i.r 1 WATERFRONT:
older home. Will purchase for About 1000 feet from the Govern.
<;ASh. 479.230a- . men! Wharf. (Not
fASH FOR 0 !r®fil...” 2 X^I ^4 ?'VaVras*lot with ocean view.,pm PXnOSUre. 170 ft
A. The most ewe-insoirinq view i
have seen, ten miles from
town. Seclusion yet neighbors
not too far all adiacant lots
built on.—2 acres of ViEW^and
Arbutues. Driveway up. then
water, hydro. Just beyond 871
WALFRED. Drive up, then
climb the last bit end look
East, South end West (North Is
treed). *40.500.
‘5 value, 4}7 ft. road
500 ft disused railwoy
'I* buMdirlg ;Saanich Inlet, East-
fASH FOR if'V'aVres”lot with ocean view .grn eXDOSUre.
rentals. Phone oesirgye Mill Bay location. ^ ^ L l
AS 2 is^aj^rne.^_ ——' *33,900. W F neoT Bomber-
r'ftp 2 bedroom COTTAGE, * )V 3 *acra level treed building lot. • ■ r- j
^iT eay iK^vicinlty. Reply VIC- slde^^ near Sfrethcona ^-Qn park - Sondy
743-5311 J. Eftema 743-2607 Kpnc'l'l I nrflP fir CP
743-5311 M. Maibon 743r5i4S Deatn. i_urye iir, te
loria Press Box I
LISTTSGR WANTED
^ew’niilan Lske
^ LIST YOUR
* SHAWNIGAN, COBBLE HILL
• OR MILL BAY PROPERTY
with
>3-5311 JOHNET1EMA 743-2607
SHAWNIGAN REALTY LTD.
^ HOMESi^
SHAWNIGAN
LAKEVIEW
dar and arbutus.
Spring on property.
Price $49,000. GRAY
LORENZEN 383-
4151 or 652-1038.
t.'NUSUAI,
OPTORTUNITY!
Almost 1 acre In North Saanich on
call Collect Anytim e- .1 crefe block building, designed for
HAVING p‘'7»0. To*i«%h;nl”™»-’^^ fa,miP,. _ Zonrt
front, e winter creek, dflvcwav
roughed and blasted in, about 3
acres ready for pasture, some
*23.000 of good fir, me whole is
)7.5 acres for $97,000 at the end
of Pegasus Way. Magnificent
views, your own country es¬
tate.
C. 100 ft. WATERFRONT, 1 plus
acres of good soil, light bush
covering. Keep your boat out
In front. Level ground, main,
water. Oufour Road off Wriffen :
Spit RO. *42,500.
D. ANOTHER GREAT VIEW I
PROPERTY, 10.1 acres a COU-:
pie of hundred yards from i
WEIRS BEACH; AAagnIfIcent
high building site on rock high
above the road (driveway
roughed In) or vou can build
lower down on good soil over¬
looking the beach. Excellent
investment as some 400 ft. of
oroposed Pearson College Rd.
solits the property. Mein water i
*70.000. !
384-8124 V8‘t»7!
DESMOND HOLMES
IIPISLAND
PROPERTfES
fPISLAND
PROPERTIES
CP-rSULVD
PROPERTIES
GULF ISLAND
PROPERTIES
YELLOW POINT — 12 CHOICE
acre* with 2300' of paved road
fronlatt. Phone, tight. Cleea to a
i good beach. Suit four families on
I OTMent zoning. On DaCourcv and
I Pysades Drive, off Yellow Point EXCELLENT BUY
; Road. Owner. 1020 Beach Drive. i54i acre treed, piped water, close
iNenaimo, B.C. _|to public beach. $12,500.
SALT SPRING
ISLAND
DUNCAN
(69 900 *
APPROX. 1 MILE FROM DUN¬
CAN
—Approx. VS acre.
—5 bedrooms.
—Over 2.000 sq. ft. finished
FARMS FOR SALE
and WANTED
TROUBLE?
Are you having trouble selling
your house? If SO, or even if you
Haven't tried yet, let JOHN
PLATT help. You'll find him at
the big REAL ESTATE (Wice with
the big PICTURE WINDOWS next
fb Eaton'S on Government St., or
at 383-2700.
- Boorman Investment Co. Ltd.
nil Government St,, 386-7S21
00 m farming.
_ _ , , RURAL. Other non-industrial uses
Neil R. MacDonald ooawt.
7AQA (')A hrc ) 3<ooo SO. ft. concrete block
nrs./ building on i ac. tws seciud-
»TniTXT»/TM/^ --■ property in N. Saanich is zoned
THINICrNG Rural Buildings designed for
mushroom farming. Other non-ln-
, dustrial uses possible. MLS 18223.
of
BUILDINCi?
J70
EXCHANGE REAL
ESTATE
f have 7 lots off MalestIc Drive. 856-4000
Folly serviced. 10^ down.
*26,400-S28,900.
OR
ONLY *40,000
... DROST 656-2427
SAANICH PENINSULA
PROPERTIES LTD., SIDNEY
OAK BAY REALTY LTD.
PROPERTIES 007 KALTOAS |
7276 Johnson St.
_ . 7 ACRES CLOSE IN i
lovers. Build vour
available from as *ow as home in the frees with a'
per acre. 4*"*^ commending view of Mt. Baker i
ihS. ^ p PH ' Straits. Clear as much of'
•» wkj need for I
NEWTON-WHI^ at »*-332f. pasture. Excellent holding proper-;
JACK_MEA55 ^ ,y gllj ,
ther information contact;
, 386-3124 R. D. LAW 478-9474 '
SUPERB VIEWS FROM THIS!
. spectacular 5-acre parcel on Dur-,
Lest one In the attractive wooded ranee Rd. Well on property. INVB.STORS
corner of Quadra and Lodge. It is $3e,ooo. Call JOHN WEST. 592-2431. ♦«'
8300 sa. ft. with 73 ft. frontage. Lansdowne Properties Ltd. Here IS your Opjiortunity to
?u“l'Vr?“i sTsm' cotoood Mol.l .on«i. iMoo w. ,t, | puivha.se two tine pan-els of I
Wale Road. Possible re-zoning, land. The first parcel cor-t
WILFRED DAVIS tewnhouses. Call for particulars; ^ • mn
479-1667 658-8884 386-8871 Bob Keeling 6S2-1251 tains ajifTroximately 210
NEWSTEAD REALTY LTD, ' arres at an asking price of
. v!iw"sir«T 4212.000. The second panel I
'Fully serviced and NHA approved land buys
i building lot at intersection of
Cedar Hill and Shelbourne (Mt.
Douglas Park) (or $29,500.
EXCHANGE For further information catl-
»' K and C Cruiser. 165 IN, OB., KNOWLES REALTY LTD.
Marine Head, steeper seats, power Bill Knowles
trim. Full canvas in excellent . 384-8101 Res. 656-3779
ahepe. Value *7,000. Trade as cart -- .
payment on smaller motor home
♦pprox. 19-20*. Phone 598-1438.
BUILDING LOT
1125 DOUGLAS ST. and
3647 SHELBOURNE ST.
55.8 Acres
1500' Waterfront
I 1 mile west of Port Ren-
SPEND A LITTLE serviced. 246-9673,
'just over two acres of well t-eed -'t PltOI*K!tTY WANTKD
property fronting on two roads. - - - - -
Why spend *12,000 to *13,000. (or a
house lot in this area (Sooke); I
when vou can get a full two acres' ,
for *19,900. Just 5 minutes away?.
An excellent investment for the fu-'
•otanlal Beach. Eiecelienf area for. WILL SHEPPARD
Mmpsite*. trailer courts, marina, 595-5171 695-5171
aic. A sportsman's and nature CANADA TRUST
Mvers paradise offered by retiring
vendors. Open to offers on asking OAK KAY
vice of *84,000. Details with
HERB McDANNOLO 595-1177 or
GLEN McDANNOLD 595-6488 or
contains approx. 101 acres
with waterfront at an asking,
price of $200,000. Both these'
parcels are fine holding pro¬
perties with great future ix)-
lential. Call anytime: i
Mark MacKenrie, Bert Coles;
59iM396. .m-8001, 592-:;aii.
THE ROYAL TRUST 00.
ice 382-9191 (24 Hr.)
Duplex Lot
Approx. 8,400 sg. ft., excavation
.. choice locetion In South Oak ANSWER TO THE NEEDS OF
Bay in a select area with mature one NATIONAL AND INTERNA-
trees. 70 «- frontage ^ 100 ft. tIONAL CLIENTS WE HAVE
deep, aoproximatelv 13,300 sg. •!-'OPENED AN I.C.I. DIVISION OF
A rare opportunity to enable you. ^ E LEPAGE IN VICTORIA,
to establish in a prime area. Ask- ^'e urgently need the following;
ing *49,500. Further information —Location for National Bank.
S>M Swan' Lake‘”DS R'evSS7u?t SwlTstal"'®'*'
Sh HERB McDANNOLD 595-1177 '***'
»FFlcE‘3«5i'?r('2?H?.”‘““‘" GORDON HEAD ^ Income* properties.
' roir A“«;nS' .‘hrJJ "dv!;- wLlKr'iur'ihf.in”;
olL.* .T. 'i'! "W- COMt ,0 Cojsl ■Klllallons per-
"itt US lO PTOVid, VOVT PTOPPrly
rr.i '? "hp N,lk>™i covprM,.
I summer. Plans available. Tell us pi«auB ran- a cdhpu
.aKAsii* s/A.ip.. rail t/.A UAr-wArfiA.. can. m. ».yner», jee-ojjt
Welcoma brisk tall days with
this Ilare-steeved top.
Fits comfortably over every¬
thing! Beautiful Big Top his
a soft cowl,collar, decorative
bonier trim. Knit of 2 strands
worsted in 4 tones. Pattern
948; Sizes 8-14 included.
$ 1 .00 for aach patlam cnh.
cheque or money order. Add 1S«
for each paOem lor flrtt-claaa mail
and handling. Sand to: Dally
Colonist Pallarn Dept . 60
Progreat Ava.. Scarborough. On-
iario. MtT4P7. Print plainly
pattern number, your name,
eddres*.
NEW 1977 NEEDLECRAFT CAT¬
ALOG has 225 designs, 3 free
patterns inside. Knit, crochet,
crafts! Send 754
Stitch 'I Patch Quilts $1.25
Crochet with Sauires... . .$1,00
Crochet a Wardrobe _$1.00
Nifty Fifty Quilts_$1.00
RIppta Crachat _» $1 00
Sew -f Knit look $1.25
Needlepoint liok__ $1.00
Flower Crochot _$1.00
Hairpli Crochot Book _$1.00
Instant Crachet look . _ $1.00
Instant Money Book . $1.00
Instant Macrami Book $1.00
Comploto filtt Book -$1.00
Conploto Afghans #14 .$1.00
12 Priza Afghans |12_Wd
Book of 16 Quilts #1 60d
Museum Quilt Book #2 ^ Mk
15 Quilts for Today #3 — OOr
Book of 16 iiffy Rugs 60#
Exctptionelly well-kept house
•nd property.
—Good veriety of fruit trees.
ERIC FRAZER
306-6331 collect 743-9155
DENNIS FERRILL
306-6331 collect . 470-6140
FRED DIELEMAN
3066331 collect 470-1110
HOBBY FARM
$74,500
—Located iust **,7 miles
from Duncan
—10.4 acres partly tread.
—3 bedroom, full basement
home.
—Well constructed bam for
a variaty of animals.
—Mostly fenced.
DENNIS FERRILL
3S6-6331 4766140
SHAWNIGAN LAKK
—Choice building lot.
—V 4 acre on Linden Rd.
—Zoned raaidantlal.
-115,000.
—Owner will take
*3500 down.
C. J. HARRINGTON
386-6331 595-5341
LOG HOME
ON
3 ACRES
MILL BAY
1 . Very aftractiva 26edroom home
on gently sloping */7-ecra In a
quiet and peaceful area of Mill
Bev. Thara is a delightful ua-
view from the house and prop¬
erty, and plenty of room for
gardening, hobbies or just en-
toying life.
2. Arc vou looking for a five-
bedroom home which can bt
spilt Into 2 self-contained units,
of 7 bedrooms and 3 bedrooms,
each with own kitchen,
bathroom, living room and din¬
ing area? Then come and see
this home and its many, many
extras. I.E. 2 ensultes. built-in
vacuum system, large carport,
lock-up garage and workshop,
300-gallon underground gas tank
complete with elKtric pump,
200 amp electrical service, and
a beautiful view over the sur¬
rounding country.
. 3. Corner lot of 1 acre with very
cozy 2-bedroom home, excellent
well, large workshop and
garage and some excellent gar¬
dening soil. Ideal lor a starter
or tor retirement — Priced to
'sell, $37,500.
' 4. Almost 43 acres of good arable
land in Cowichan Station area,
this farm slopes gently with i
southern affect and has a consid¬
erable amouni of marketable
timber, a year around creek, a
2-bedroom older home, and road
on 3 sides.
For further details en any of the
above propertias contact Tom 1
6urd«« «l 7^-5575 or ms. ^ yI. SMOlch
. Rd. Modern 3-bedroom home, two
cabins, and longhousa. Terms ne¬
gotiable. Phone; GLENN Nl-
i CHOLLS 592-2431 or 591-7*89. Lins-
' downe Properties.
11.27 ACRE FARM
SAANICH
PENINSULA
$130,000
This tremendous farm is
perfect for bOTses and cat¬
tle. .1 -B.R. home and self
contained 1 B.R. cottage. 2
wells and irrigation pond.
Bam and chicken coop. All
equipment for sale and ne-
g o t i a b 1 e . Possibly aub-
divideable in future. To
View Call:
SHANE .186-887] or 388-6273
PAGER No. 574 or STANE-
LAND 384-0994 or FRED
.388-6275 PAGER No. 2424.
NEWSTEAD REALTY LTD.
.3200 QUADRA ST.
FOR LEASE
12-ACRE FARM
J55,
COBBLE HILL
Brian Hurst
743-2544
Larry Wilcox
746-6888
J. H. WHITTOME
AND CO. LIMITED
DUNCAN, B.C.
7484311
fcra.
655 FORT ST.
384-9335
QUAUCUM AREA
RANCH and FARM
Secluded 24’/> acres with gracious
older home, bern for horses end
for youth or church group. For
further details call. MLS 15923.
Asking;
$149,500
MADGE or DON ROBBINS
384-9335 384-9072
Ix)vely 3 bedroom home sit¬
uated on Noowick Rd. Mill
Bay. $48,500. Commuting
time about 30 minutes to
Victoria. Many features
such as: excellent fireplace,
large living-dining rcxwn and
a large aundeck overlooking
the Saanich Inlet. For infor¬
mation on thi* property call
LES ALLEN at 746-4L54 or
evenings 748-<624.
PARKSVILLE
3 Acres Plus Cabin
Only 1 mlla from Parksvilla. on
pavad road » 200* Frontage and a
satting like Stanley Park. Hurry —
call Al Hughes, Evas. 2486956.
2 Acres and Cabin
A tread property — a cabin nastW
In tfw woods — en Ideal holi¬
day retreat. Located approx. 4
miles west of Quallcum Beach,
near the Alberni Hwy. Price
$22,500. Contact Al Simons, Evas.
757-8760.
R. THWAITES AGENCIES (1972)
LTD.
ESTABLISHED 1912
1029, ParksvIMe. B.C. Ph.
248-3329
cortesTsIand
440 feet of waterfront— 1.4 acres of
HOW TO WRITE
A GOOD
CLASSIFIED ACTION AD
j
t-lT'S BEST to Start vour ao
with the name o> the article or
service you have to offer. If
you havo an apartment, roum
etc., for rent, or property for
laiei start your ad with tnt
locaflcn.
I—BE CLEAR. Readers respono
more guickiv end favorably
when given complete, definite
Information. Always include the
price In your advai tlsament.
4 bedrooms, fireplace, W-W and
lino floors, doubit plumbing, larga
sundeck. 4.06 acres. Wbttrmain.
*49,500.
2.49 acres, soOth slope, arable, wa-
termaln, pavad road, ctosa to
ferry. *22,»0.
CALL BOB TARA
Eves. 6536435 Days 537-5515
WATERFRONT HOME
Approximately V 2 acre, 107 ft. of
sandy beech, newly constructed
2-bedroom home, kitchen, dining
room, living room with fireplace,
large sundeck. Prke 867,500.
160 acres of Seavitw property,
some arable laand, lots of timber,
sunny oak bluffs, southern ex¬
posure, access to beach and wharf.
Price *120400. Terms 33% down.
1.22 acres close to beach. Arable
land, walking distance to sandy
beach, seavitw. Price SI9,SOO. I0°'ft
down.
CALL MEL TOPPING
Evas. 537-2426 Days 537-5515
OCEAN INLET LOT
99' frontage, .57 acre, southern ex¬
posure. Power, Phone, watermain,
c*Wa TV. Easy to build on,
* 1 * 400 . Terms.
One mile from Ganges en 1',^
acres with wafer stream. Modern
2-badroom post and beam combi¬
nation "A" frame. Owner will con¬
sider oHers to *48,000.
New 3-bedroom, lake view Lindai
home on V* acre level, serviced lot
in St. Mary Highlands. Full base¬
ment. Sundacks. 855400.
1 acre Woodland Drive. Rocky
with many arbutus. View of
ocean. Water, power. *21400 cash.
2-3 acre Scott Point. Near wa¬
terfront. Serviced and cleared.
Owner will look at offerl $23,500.
23^ acres. Farmy, level, arable
area. Piped water. Short walk to
store, beech and public dock.
$23,500.
CALL DICK TRORY
Eves. 537-2236 Days 537-55IS
BEST VALUES
3.10 acres drilled well, erbutue and
fir trees, driveway to building ette,
all ready to go. 81S400.
1118' waterfront on a nice beach,
open seavlew. comfortable retire-
ment home, workshop end carport.
*74400.
CALL JIM SPENCER
Eves. S37-2IS4 Days 537-5515
DENMAN ISLAND
4 small cabins on pleasant racrea-
tlonat lots. Water on some, power
available. Priced from S14,500,
*15,200 to *22.900.
'/s acre waterfront lets, fully ser¬
viced. Excellent views. Prom
$21,000. Terms.
HORNBY ISLAND
near good beach.
Beautiful refiramant home on Peri¬
winkle Point. Good bay on side.
*77.500.
land. Locat^ by Government itockj |_ pi ay SAFE
at Cortes Bay. Home in excellent, - •
condition—Small guest cottage—:
large workshop—Garden area.
F.P. *75,000.00
Call Bruce Eilingsen 9356330
EAGLECREST
t acre pared with 3 bedroom log
J-AAAKE IT EASY lor the ^Mder :
prospect to reach you. Always'
give your telephone numbnr ^t^mpl'p^sinclair
your name and address. If you ^
do not have regular nours- 1 oeys 537-5515
state e preferred time for theippMnpD ici aun
prospect/to get In touch with island
RETIREMENT PERFECTION
Older, well maintained, 2-bodroom
home, large kitchen, dining room.
You got th* i;
with HERB McDANNOLD 595-1177
^ GLEN McDANNOLD 595-6488 or
FFICE 382-9191 (24 Hr.)
^Canada Permanent
C Trust Company
4.0T WITH VIEW
>#8tch the ferries at Swartz Bay ’/V i Co_
4fero lot in quiet cul de sac. Ready d. v
re build on. *35,900. lUAKKAY —
4 LOTS, $16,000
:On West Shawnioan Lake Rd.
Junction of Santa and Vivian,
fteautifuiiy treed Well required.
Within about 250' of lake. MLS
18864.
R. JOHNSON W. MICHAELS
RITHET AGENCIES LIMITED
714 Fort Street _ 3826251
SPECTAClfLARVlEW
SOUTH OAK BAY
$58,000
Custom plan If desired. MLS.
JEANNiE OEWHURST, 384-8001
or Res. 477-6040. The Royal Trust
«H'l3l2i/yrs-s75,ooo
' Builders present your offers
-CURTEIS POINT
&auti(ul half acre wooded lot
rm* choice secluded area. Reduced
Id *32,000.
PREO SUTTON 652-1857
: LOTS IN
1 BRENTWOOD
- ONLY 2 LEFT
I these two lots — Vendors enxious.
' Both lots 46x146 on a good street.
-,595-5171 DOUGPOSK1TT 477-0645
CANADA TRUST _
GORDON HEAD ’
Off Majestic — 6,000 sq. ft. build¬
ing lot realy to 90 . Listed at
*28.000. For further Information
call;
4776191 PETER CHOWN 477-0767
WANTED
SUBDIVISION
DEVELOPMENT
PROPERTIES
IMMEDIATE CASH OFFERS
AVAILABLE
ANY SIZE ACREAGE
CONSIDERED IN
GREATER VICTORIA AREA
CALL
GARY MEYER
385-6211
ENGINEERED HOMES LIMITED
WATERFRONT or 1
SEAVIEW t
Prooartv between Victoria and
Parksvilie. You tell me about your
properly. I'll phone this couple in
Calgary. They will fly out at once.
DAR GARSIDE, 384-8001. The
Royal Trust Co. r
• ■ 4 i T 0 a
HIGHIjVNDS
2.10 ACRES
—ARE YOU LOOKING
FOR? '
—Paaca and aaclusion In tha
country.
—Magnificent valley end
mountain views.
—Rocky arto traad homasift
high in the hills.
—Offer* will be considered
on the full price of $34,900.
DENNIS FERRILL
3866331 , 4716140
Royal Trust Raat Estate Dept.
16 LOTS
. edventages. A quiet cul-
£-sac. bacKIng on Butchart Gar-
”■ "• Oordon Head dH Kenmdr,. Ldls S«.H71
piTv/e minimum 7500' up and are fully
CWVe RANSON 385-9741 1 some with sea views.
-. __ For further information contact
A-CMOICE OF 3 BUnZ>INC;
9.87 ACRES
SAANICH OLDER ’
2 BEDROOM HOME
Just under lO acres near Saanich
border. Beautifully flat, immensely
fertile land, currantiy leased to
local vegatable farme# by the sea¬
son. Plenty of water for Irrigation
at pond at back of prooertv. A two'
bedroom (older) rented at *150 par
month. This property is very, very |
reasonably orlced at $96,500.00. Act
Iasi on this.
477-1841 TARA BHALLA 3836879
BLOCK BROS. REALTY LTD.
WOODED
WONDERLAND
49 acras of beautiful stclusion
in East Sooke. Lots of trees
and clearings to build your
own log cabin. A great recraa-
tional area with futura poten¬
tial. Try vour offer on asking
price of S110,d00. For more in¬
formation call Art Mauger
6S66S09. . _
C. N. MONTAGUE CO. LTD.
384-9318
Catch The Breeze
Printed Pattern
MYSTERY BEACH
NEW ON MARKET
'/a ACRE LOTS
FROM $149 DOWN
^ AND 1149 MONTH
RETIREMENT INVEST¬
MENT or RECREATION
Located )? miles south of Cour-
iltl’™'' " ““•'Ll3 Sol, courM telf. PrIcM;
cum. FEATURING large treed m son ii« 500
> semi-waterfront lots -t 2000 ' of »''''**■
waterfrom park across the road I Plus 3 — 18,000 square foot lots. I
•nioyntbP* of swimming, Prices; $17,000, *17.500, *15,500.
fishing, boating, etc. All lots on 1 pgr full details rail; 7526961
P»v*d ' Quallcum RaaHy. Box 47. Quail-1
•^oaos. Price, SI4.900-*16.900 — ex- cum, B.C.
cellent terms. For information con- ■ ■, ■— .
, tael Frank or Dave McLaughlin [SHAWNIGAN AREA — Family
personally at Nanaimo Realty Co.lhomt, 2 yrs. old. with 4 bedrooms.
Ltd.. Box Sie Nanaimo at 7S4-331lllVj baths, fireplaces in rumpus
-* evenings collect, 3906334 or and living rooms, wrap-around
>■^7. .sundeck. sadudad setting. Owner
‘ I has moved to Saskatchewan ar>d is
[anxious tor sale of property locat¬
ed on Robin Hill Drive. Your rea¬
sonable offer will suit.
[7466161 PAUL OSBORNE 746-5339
■top your.ad as soon as vou get,Qu.c« coHao* 2 immI trutt
using consacuMva Insertions, a ^ ^®"den’ pasture' mHw
six6ay order It best and costs' p*”®*^*-
lass, and you can. of course, mcar waterfront
.Sr ^ crt.r.d build.
SSu>riS.' ?d*„.da” yaar f„ gardenlna. Good view
S'„ acre parcel witn 3 badroom kw I IfJ*jrSf|',ble°17 Iboe? who wIS' !!''k"*’'L•" ellored bay wm
boose end 3 lop not buMdlodt. f.* ° Grub'S * Si. “adb end mo^e J smell col-
Ideel holdin, property. ^ Sodocifbtwt meT«,l “ **"■
WATERFRONT
7.6 acre island near Salt Spring.
SOOKE RIVER
ACREAGE
Ijjs — all with ocean view
am) a waterfront, lot. All at
jjOrmlar WUlis Point. So nat-
ucal and yet so close. Only
J9rea of its kind left in Vic-
furia. Ixits start at $28,500.
A. Klcnman, Town and
u n t r y Realty Ltd.
ai2-7276.
31! DEEPOOVE.
* SEA VIEW
I. ONLY $32,500
Almost waterfront 100x120 ft. treed
tos on Madrona Drive in North
Saantch. Lovely Views over the
Cgve. close to Marina. Water
mains, ready for building. MLS.
17087. What Is your offer?
6)6-4000 K. DROST 656-2427
• SAANICH PENINSULA
• PROPERTIES LTD. SIDNEY
ACRES rolling’ "faRM
igrid approx. 12 acres cleared,
frontage on Chemanlus hiohwav
N^h municipal water, brook for ir-
rtoattoo runs through centre of
property 5 minutes from shopping
centre and boat ramp. 60 minutes
from the heart of Victoria, *4000
oar acre. Vender will carry *20,000
aTI0«e. Phone 246-3460.
386-2361. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m
SAVARY ISLAND
Ideal investment for the future.
’a ACRE PROPERTY
AAay be suitable for a pandhandie
lot. An older, large family home is
on the front of the property. Any
reasonable offer will be presented
on this Torquay property.
.- ROBDANIELSEN 595-4482
CANADA TRUST . „ „
- - • Approximately 9.77 acres located
2-5 ACRES WITH RESIDENCE on the Sooke River Road. Lot is,
suitable for greenhouse and horse, mainly level with a drop 6 ff to the
Also 5-10 acras for horses. River Flats. It Is n the A.L.R..
Mary McGuire Donna VaiikoskI and restricted as to subdivision,
rt.. ... ....p.. ....p . -r,* Offered al *60,000. MLS.
, MUGLAS REALTY LTD. ROBERT MIK1TKA
1 479-7668 3IS-8784 3 ^ 4.7521 477-5373
. r-i-i-i- BOORMAN INVESTMENT CO. ,
APT. SITE _LTD.
and recreation enjoyment now.
lot. *4,900. 2 for *9900. PETER
TER VEER, 3846001 or Res.
479-1588. The Royal Trust Co, ' ^ 1111 aovprnmpnt street
■ ■■ ■ -w. - Builder requires 10,000 to 100,000 GOVERNMENT street
R1 I DFkS SR- •>'«« Immediate i Avn
Ci ... .7 development. Phone now, Kasaoi
T®'* Construction,. 3166191. 5 ACRES
Tyndall near Ash. Buildli
mits now available.
598-4371.
WATERFRONT OR VIEW PROP- '
r,'/. ;"r.,.rr'T"'cObft'“S’...”"d Krted .nd'mbnfc^rw.T.T’* yS!!:
DUPLEX LOT CITY bii*ding w [t 479^168. " *W#. Beeutiful, secluded and away
Just listed. 50x141 lot near R. Ath- ..... from traMic noise, but a short:
letic Park. Has old, but habitable PRIVATE. CASH FOR LARGER drive to city. Off Stelly's X Rd.,
3 BR house on it. (MLS) *38.000 tot to build executive type home, going (or just a bit more than a
Cash. Quiet location in Gordon Head small building lot. Prica *65,000.
- MLS. BUD ZUCK. 3846001 or Res.
598-7215. Jhe Rnyal Trust Co.
•rfW IT-ISIANI)
PROPERTIES
LEVERTON REALTY 385-8012 *f«*- 479-3411.
DUPLEX LOT 1.3d ACRES, SEA-
view, located In Sooke. Asking ^80 ACREAOE FOR SAIJl
*28,500. Builders terms available.
Please phone Jim, at 478-1719, or
478-9125, after 6;00 p m.
.AND WANTED
MILL BAY AREA
ACRES
BEAUTIFUL .21 ACRE LOT, BURNSIDE-PROSPECT LAKE __
quiet cul6e-s8C, close to schools. Secluded treed acreage. Ideal tor tvvo ACRES with unobstructed
buses, shopping. Cedar Hill area, home site, horse ranch etc. 427 ft. sea-view, propefty Includes new
Offers to *34,900. No agents, road frontage. Price *76,000.00 . 3-b#droom lull-basement home
595-7980, C. Carpenlar or Pat Hope 388-5555 with carport. Exceptionally well
TWO LOTS 66X120 ON HOL ' ® Agency constructed and finished. If you
_ .. _ good family
ifh exceptional view this is
good value at *79,500. Terms if
necessary. Contact RON PHIL¬
LIPS, 746-5890, The Permanent
-ARDMORE WAY
*22.000 for both. Unserviced
112-7436773. evenings. C
58,500. RECREATIONAL CAMP jread land with oanoramlc views ''!?*
on*^oad Scc«s oS^^ToMtlaw ?ORNE CAMM'ell"S''J 16S» '
tank, joulh end of Shawnigan 20 miles from city centre, ji?, ^791105 "
_MLS No. 17933. *195.000 with ^^9 "'95.
terms.
Over 21 Beautiful
Railing Acres
With 4 bedroom split level home.
Large living room with FP. dining ./vu^ple BAY SEAVIEW — Very
room with glass doors to oatio, [well kept U-vr.-old home on Maple
modern famfly kitchen, w6 hook-; gay Road on large Killy land-
up; I'/j baths, thermopanel? Aiilscaoed tot. * bedrooms, 7
brs. lar^; 1320 sg. ft. plus base-! bathrooms, larga r#c. room and
nwl. Extras Include exc. cased Hiving room both with fireplaces, j 01 arw vniia an r.ii na*
'SSa''li * DHve ^“lOM MaPto
5—PLACE YOURSELF In tna HO' W-F. 12x60' mobile home. Sa-
readar's pMliion and ask vour turna island. $34,000.
self What you want to know: CALL MANFRED BURANDT
about vour offer. Tha answer; Pander Island, 620-3271
vou give will make a good
SALT SPRING LANDS LTD.
Box 69, GANGES, B.C.
537-5515
-GIVE YOUR PROSPECT every
Indiicemanf vou can with good
copy. Classified aciicn ad read¬
ers have tha money and ar*
already intertstad In buying the
merchandise or service vou
have to offer; the details and
Information vou alva art the
most important.
raMuon^jOHnnoni
•aisocurrsi iTD
Attractive Vi Acre
Lat, Harnby Is.
Laval treed lot on beautiful Sand-
•7466161 PAUL OSBORNE 746-5329
'j. H. VWITTOME_and_CO. LTD.
Camax Peninsula
Woterfrant Bluff
$73,500
2 acres of country atmosphere 2
i miles from Comox, is the setting .
for this 2 bedroom older home In
good condition. Completely rano-
-- . . __ _ vatad kitchen and dinette area :
piper Beach. Short walk to perk , with natural cedar cabinets, 13x27 ,
land beach. Easy access from Van- living dirting room with stone fire-
I couver Is. for vour camper. Try place, landKaped yard bordered
i vour offer to asking price of > by trees and orchard. Large com- |
: *8,500. MLS 16145. For more infer-1 b'naticn workshop, gerage and
I maton. call: : stofbea. Ideal property for active I
B ill retired couple or small family. Of- 1
III noran feree it * 73 , 500 . contact David'
385-7761 24 hrs. 477-1287 Res. : Hansen. 338-1959 or at L. M. S. \
'homes LTD., 334-4424, Courtenay. '
D- F, HA NLEY AGENCIES LTD, , B.C. ___ ^
ATTENTION
LANDLOVERS
5 ACRES
;Gattiic four-bedroom hiULse,
I two bathroomfi, full base¬
ment. double carport, par-_ . .
I tia! s e a V i e w. Oose to | IJSfront
'school* and stores, yet still
secluded. Asking $54,900.
2121 , vour direct line number to
fast Want Ag action. A courte¬
ous, sfficlant advisor will bt
glad to help vou word and
place vour order. And remem¬
ber. Classified Action Ads afford
vou the most comoiate covet
age. Igleononas art open 6:00
■ m. to 6:0t» e.m. for vou daitv
Monday through Saturday call
386-2121
DUNCAN LAND :
FARMS I
37 Ac. hay creek $92.000.1 3BS
61 ac. creek, potatoes, hay *115,0001
15.75 ac. meadowland *75,000 __
WATERFRONT
31 ac. lakefront. treed
2 ac. riverfront
GDLF ISLAND
PROPERTIES
$190,000
INVESTMENT
246-3344.
By Owner
Two Eighty Five
*139,500;
*29,500
*29,5001
*29.900 J .
1 Peace and tranquility on
! Sah Spring Island. Abixit 9
- - -- of rural treed ex-
and 5 acres
NORTH PENDER ISLAND
A GREAT PLACE TO
RETIRE
View al laisura this classic 3
bedroom immaculate lakefront
open beam home on Magic
Lake. Features fireplace, wall
to wall shag carpet, hot wafer
heating, walnut ash cupboards,
level entrance to main floor
and expert iindscapInQ. Rec.
room and extra room in base¬
ment not completed, 20-30
oarage workshop could be
made into a cosy guest cot¬
tage. Home nestled among
evergreens giving ultimafe se¬
clusion. A raal^m at Sto.SOO.
OTHER LAKE FRONTS -
New 3 bedroom holiday home
cn park-ltka level lakefront tot.
Needs soma Interior finishing.
An excellent buy at *27,50o.
Ready for holiday fun — ser¬
vices in — wharf at Lake —
Cozy trailer ~ a steal at
*18,500.
Lakefront lots from *10,900 Up.
OCEAN WATERFRONT — Su¬
perb views —- services, $17,500
to *65,000.
PANABOOE — 800 *g. ft. Ser¬
vices in. It's not too high at
*31,000.
ACREAGE — 37 Ac. hobby
farm tor tha horse lover. Most¬
ly level — Some cleared —
Older home and cabin, sunny
location. View. Asking *77,900.
6 ACRES — Sunny S.W. Ex¬
posure with sparkling view,
foravar over vallay, farm and
ocean. Only *30,750. Other view
properties to $17,500.
HIDEAWAY LOTS — startlnq
at *6,500.
SATURNA ISLAND — Ex¬
cellent buys — 2 lots side bv
side for *8J)00 or *4,500 ea.
OCEANFRONT — far south
view, *ISJ)00.
Coma to the "Bahamas of Can¬
ada" by phoning a Gulf Island
soaclalist Ted Dever 620-3371
or 629-3434 collect.
MacAui^y Njcolis Maitland
wa-
H0RN8Y ISLAND
Robin Falls, founds (builder)
manager of Wlckaninnish inn at
Lake. 59S-0611.
>•1 in this area can be bought (or
*31.900. Mr. James, Victoria Real
ty Ltd.. 38^3585, 477-8134,
: DEVELOPERS!!
Brentwood Bav. aoprox. 100,000 sq.
IS... one of the few R.M.l. zoned
oropcriics in this area. Please call
308*42/1 Roselle Jackson 398-1093
tor mort details
1^4271 Jack Swanston 5926338
y^H. WHITTOME AN 0 CO. LTD.
WANTED
tfaed or some view building tot in
<sr near the city. Must be at least
dtoOO sa. It. and about *30,000 or
>••5.
58*-5171 ROB DANIELSEN-595-4486
CANADA TRUST
Apofox. 1 acre of treed seclusion On Cedar Hill*"Crossroad 11 S 7731 477 3626 ALSO MILt^AY
iSrtJil ""oiRONER REALTY LTd'. AREA '
SOOKE. ATTRACTIVE SPACious O 0*3 APRP^ prooerty includes
1 ^ In ♦hj« mrmM ran ha hn,u)h« «-.r 2 lo 3 acrts. partially Z.UO AUKCj large full basement family home
weeded. 642-5508, 642-4186 Only S'-} miles from downtown, about 2 years old in immaculate
_ _ _ -pi„]y ,reed and only about i'/» condition. Very fertile soli, ideal
DEEP COVE. V} ACRE, WELL mile* from Royal Oak Shopping spol tor horse. Price reduced to
on oroperty. ON Chalet Road. Centre Asking *51,000. *59,500. Contact RON -PHILLIPS,
iU.OOO. 383-9788, • 477-1841 DANNY MASSEN 471-7008 746-5890, The Permanent, 58 Sta-
1 7 A/-Bcc' oAOk-” fto.ue ecA - BOCK BROS, realty LTD. Hon Street, Duncan, B.C., or
1.7 ACRES. PARK DRIVE, SEA _ . . - ... LORNE CAMPBELL. 7466559. of-
view. space for private Lake. THE MAKINGS FOR A SECLUD-Hice 748-8105.
I $55,000. 478 6268. ed. woodsy estate. 650' lakefron-
taje, 2,000 adjoining go» club.^^31 41/2 ACRES
.. - - Victoria Mill Bay area, 3-bedroom, lull-
_ Press Box 135. basement, heatilator fireplace, a
.72 ACRE TREED LOT. COBBLE 77 good solid home about 6 years old.
Hill *17,900. 478-3241. Aroirc V. p ▼ t a 1 includes a large barn and
DEEP COVE, VIEW LOT. *21.fl067 cleared House tr^er ^ooXup'olner 'anSouV'to"’® oWeST*?©
652-1777. Contact RON PHILLIPS,
— — .w*"- ’5 minutes^frOT C^r -1 Permanent, 58 Sta-
'Itlon Street. Duncan, B.C., or
'LORNE CAMPBELL, 746-6559, ed¬
ifice 748-8105.
MILL BAY ~ 2.2 ACRES
SEAVIEW.
T1 AT^A ■rA«rrtA^AT'^2Hirt!n«**^,!!i' »cre8.’ 8”mlles'from 'city centre.
479-4M2* building lot jogo.ooo cash_to morfaga..
c.m.
RECREATION LOT. NEAR fenay Vancouver Island on paved>'{
lake. *7.500. 384-7036 after 6 p.m road. *45,000. 112-584-9116 after '
BEAUTIFUL V 7 ACRE SEAVIEW Iql . —T-* Arec
nillillnR lol in exclusive 10 Mile' V;?* ,
RRtn, area. Quiet, wooded country' Cloae in, -- im ruMHlin^Runr
SECLUSION
Vlct^a. ^ ?Tn teaulilul acres In viroln timber,
LOTS FOR SALE "on'JEFFREY - --- jsiwllarri My .ftr boatinR anibusi
WATERFRONT
PRICE Reouired in the Sooxe Aree. up to as*- minutes trom sliobbing. gon.
15 acres of oMd land Will P8v altjschooi. etc. e rare find. Please
• cash Call at once to call RANDY McLEOD, 748-2894 or
7 ACRE CORNER LOT,' DEEP LOT FOR SALE. 50X138. HOLD- P G JACKSON LIMITED PHIL LOWE. 746-5018. or BLOCK
tove. well treed, 479-7549 'inq erooerlv, *7,500. 4776765. >1070 Douoles Stoeet 388-9102 i BROS.. DUNCAN, 746-4175.
Rrl. Off East Saanich Rd;, Saanich-i SOOKE LOT, CLEARED
ton. 652-1579. *16,900 Phone 642-5655
Catch the breezes in a shape¬
ly sundress with comfortable
side • to • back waist seaming!
Pretty in print, sleek in stripes
or sunshine solids.
Printed Pattern 9269; Half
Sizes lOl/a. 12'/a. Hl'i. ISI z.
18'^2. 20^2. Size lA'/g (bust
37) takes IH yards GO inch.
$1.00 for iteft pattern ~ caah,
cheque or money order. Add I5e
for etch pettom tor firet-claee meil
end handling. Send to; Daily
Colonist Paliern Depl.. 60
Progrees Ave.. Scarborough, On¬
tario. MIT 4P7. Print plainly
padarn number, your name,
addreee.
If you think clothing is too ex¬
pensive. save and sew - send
for NEW FALL-WINTER PATTERN
CATALOG! ISO styles - lots of
exciting quickies. Free pattern
coupon. Send 75'=
Instant Sawing Book $1.00
Saw + Knit look $1.25
Instant Monoy Crafts $100
Instant Fashion Book $1.00
fort on .85 acres with beautiful
year round stream. Oty water,
wall to wall carpets, ensulte
plumbing, plus an aftractiva well
planned suHe for rent. All this
and more for full prict of *55.900
Excellent 4erms to reliable pur-
' chaser. Nartalmo 7S4-94to.
Owner Transferred
MUST SELL
FULLER LAKE SECLUSION
Four-bedroom home, large sun-
.deck, overlooking lake, floor-to
iceiling fireplaces up and down.
Zone controlled hot-water heat.
,etc.. etc. For sale by owner. Full j
Asekinn orie* tAO 000 Pnr abmIM. I
HQMESITES
4 ac. treed, upland
SV^ ac. mtadowiand
Can WAYNE GRIFFITH for acres
mapA and brochura*. 746-5171 eri, _
eves. 7466275. I farm. ... _
H.W. DICKIE LIMITED ; terfmnt /nned orMnmnrfial l-Of>Q Beach until axproprlated two
70 dQVERNMENT STREET commercial. travelled M.(IOO miles in
DUNCAN, B.C. MLS 17398. For details call : 1974 looking for a naw homesito.
"WE SELL THE ISLAND" > nog gg 7 i /'^OAF f AXt/^CT'/Yw found it on this beautiful Gi'lf
.»b6J8f] OKAt LANObTDN tsiand. but twd to purchase the
38B-8596 | upper 100 acres of the Kniefei
MEnirff-rt.-ArN nT.YATTAtr i-T.r-x |f8rm, much mofe than needed. He
NflWSTLAD RLALTY LTD. has now built his new home and
— ■ -idlvided the land Into 10 lots from 5
FARM AND REVENUE j''.
A mrraa rt<bn<l>*lM at ,bsA,.R^. I S® toke S lelSUrClV WSlk
•'®"9 private access rotd
^ropm home. 24.sten cOTcreto;,hro^^ flfowth firs and
I 0*l<s and if vou like what
51x20 greenlwuse. Excellent sup- you see, oet In touch. You'll find
aS'’ with I them past the co-oo, first left tiirn
retaining tank of 4.000 gallons Plus of^Sfrqchan Road. Hava a niea
revenue from an up and down I walk
duplex. To view, ppH anytime:
MLS 18651.
W. H. (BILL) CLARK
CANOA TRUST
S95S17)
SATURNA ISLAND
658-5877
Askinr oric. * 69 ^ Mooim from sandy beach and
tA ui.lfAii^swM •‘’‘^‘"’■.downtown Parksvilla. tha lot is on
ment to view call 246-3708. J
pal services and contains approx.
9944 SQ^. ft. Asking orice *15,000. rqc
384-8001 AL-MATTEO 6$8-50$7
384-8001 AL MATTEO 658-5057
YQUBOU FAMILY HQME
Vbedroom. full basement, work- ’944 so.
shop, fireplace, fruit trees, and 384-8001
garden. Caroort-sundeck large
enough for truck end camper.
G»raoe in basement. Close to
school *nd swimming, with nice
'view of lake. No agents. *33,500.
745-6232
.5 AC. FUU.Y SERVICED
TOE ZIEGLERS
WATERFRONT — «> ACRE
southerly exposure, wail treed
"Year round moorage" with 8-rm.
house — fireplace, outside work¬
shop, part basement on Ovster
Bay, Ladysmith. Phone 245-2707.
FOR SALE BY~6wNeR."FAMILY
home, Ito treed acres. 300 feet
river frontage. 10 minutes from
town centre. Pleasant country sur¬
roundings. Phone 287-3715 or VtC-
iorla Press Box 67.
STARTER OR RETIREMENT
HOME
2 bedroom house on double tea-
view lot. Lot 53x100' close to
school en stores. *31JXI0 firm.
Phone 6*3-4546 or 246-3344.
WATERFRONT LOT. NICELY
treed, wonderful view, approx,
two-thirds acras in Parksvilla near
town. Powar and water available.
Victoria Press Box 145.
BEAUTIFUL SEAVIEW LOT IN
Seltelr. an water. Price $11,900.
245-3829, Ledysmith. _
PARKSVILLE. FULLY SERViCE'd
1-3 acre lot in cul-de-sac. Close lo
beech. $14,900. 383-255$.
40 ACRES
SUBDIVIDABLE
Gently -sloping land with numerous
types of trees in natural state.
This beautiful property Is situated
in the Regional District of Cow-
ichen. Asking $120,000. For more
■niarm^tion olaese call:
TED WILKINSON or 0. DOUGLAS
RiTHET AGENCIES LIMITED
7U_FQrt Straet, 3B2-4251 (an ytima)
PARKSVILIE
WOOOSEY 10 ACRES PLUS 2
STOREY FARM HOUSE ONLY
$52,000. CALL BRIAN RIPLEY
BUS; 592-2431. RES: 598-5643.
LANSDOWNE PROPERTIES.
I ACRES ZONED FOR MOBILE
home park. Halfway between
Campbell River and Courtenay.
923-6629. r
SHAWNIGAN LAKE
By owner — 1.3 acres, nicely
treed. *20,500. 743><059.
EAGLE REALTY LTD.
Bex 1060. Parktville, B.C.
Telephone 248619 1__
PARKSVILLE. LARGE SER-
viced let. Excellent location.
*13.900. 479-9184.
Home site for sale. Inland half
acre on Sunset Blvd. Hendy to
Lyeli Harbour, ferry, beach,
school and a store. 100x262. All
clear, lot 38 at the low price of
*11,600. Terms iSMO down and
vendor financing on balance. Sur-
592-17681 vey and mao by calling WAYNE
384-8075 (PGR 310) 'GRIFFITH 7466171 or cves
.- -- 7466273.
H.W. DICKIE LTD.
70 GOVERNMENT STREET
DUNCAN, B.C.
_"WE sell “mEjaL^ND" _
SALT SPRING ISLAND ~
10 ACRJK HOBBY FARM
Renovated 2-B.R. home with large
barn. Fishing and swimming lake
within 100' of property. Some fenc¬
ing. Southern exposure. This one
wlTl not last tong at $ 60 , 000 .
RON McQUIGGAN
537-5521 (Days) 537-9220 (Evenings)
Wall and Redekop Realty
Box 570, Ganges, B.C.
CANADA TRUST
NORtH~’p’E'NbFR~ I’sC”INVESf-
ment value herti 1 acre, ocean
bluff, plus naw home, 3 view
levels. You completo and save.
Second bathroom roughed in. In-
ciudas furnishings, car, even linen
and dishes. Taxes $377.28. Priced
In the 6fl's . Offers, call 629-3449.
DENAAAN ISLAND
Rustic cabin on seven eights acre
of stiectfully developed land—with
well. Close to Ftllongely Beach.
Oysters, clams, fishing. By owner.
47*6955.
WATERFRONT, APPR. 3000 FT.
and 40 acras with two beaches on
South Salt Spring. Subdividabic.
Price *135,000. Phone 592-3920 or
3166552. F. C. Hully, Reel Estate.
620 View.
SALT SPRING ISLAND
St. Mary's Lake beeutfvl ene-
ecre lot with 90 feet of senov
beech. Sell bv owner, *32,000.
943-2M6, Delta, B.C.
FOR SALE BY OWNER. 6A-
liano Island. 4.5 ecree, prlmt rec¬
reation land, view near water.
Phone Vancouver 73M8*6.
LOVELY
DENMAN ISLAND
>4 ACRE LOTS
Level, tread and no rock A
2 -min. stroll to tha beach.
*12,505613,500.
59S-517I DICK JAMES 592-2139
CANADA TRUST
NORTH PENDER WATERFRONT
Level lot 160' waterfrontaga on
Badwall Harbour, with fin* views
of the canal and bridge. 1.39 acres
with picturesbue meadow end
GANGES LOT 156X106X1*2X102 woodad areas. Easy accass to
level. Price *17,200. Phone 992-3920 beech. Hydro and telephone readi-
or 3*66552. F. c. Hullv. Reel Es- ly available. Call owner 629-3582
tatt, 620 View. ' Pender.
Deaths
and funerals
0.1 DKATHS and
FUNKRAl^S
BEASLEY — Ptrcy E. Born In
Donald. B.C. 1894. passed away
ai Royal Jubilee Hospital Thurs¬
day. August 19. Son o< the late
Mr. ano Mrs. H. H. Beasley,
predeceased by his sitter Lei
and brother Hal. Beloved brother
of Arthur G., dearly loved uncle
ot Gladwyn Robatallla of Mon
treal and loved Great Uncle of
Gladwyn SKith and John Roti
tailie and Great Great Uncle of
little David and John. He lemed
the SOth Gordon Hlohlandtrs be-
•ore the First World War, but
■aler entered the Royal Naval
Air Service in June 1915. He
s«rv^ two years in France, in
the later part of the war he was
transferred to England where he
was Commanding Officer of the
Marine Observers School of
Bombino and Gunnery. He also
served four years In the Second
Wo'^id War In the control towers
of Ihe R.C.A.F. Along with a few
other Victorians he obtained his
rilots license at Wright Bros.
Flying School and was named
cn the Honor Scroll of the first
JDO pilots who treined there.
The funeral sarvice will be on
Monday, Aguust 23, 1978 at 2:30 in
Christ Church Cathedral Chapel.
Burial in the family plot at Ross
Bay Cemetary. WicCall Bros. In
charge of arrangements.
BROWNE: — In Victoria, 8.C.. on
August ia. 1978, Mrs. Anns
Louise Browne, aged S7 years,
horn in Winnipaq, Manitoba, and
a resident of Victoria for many
vears. lata resldance, 83 Goroa
Rd. East.
^Service will be held in the Sands
^^fuary LlmHed. "AHemorial
Chapel of Chimes,” on A/Vonday.
Auauet 2X 1974. at tt;00 a.m. Rav.
Father Maurice Costelloe officiat¬
ing.
SANDS-VICTORIA
f^*LL — In Victoria. B.C.. on
william
t:**!.' *fle^83 years. Born in Wal
bottle. Buckinghamshire. Bnq-
l?r?' been e resident of
^ctorle the pest 2S years.
We residence, Suite I0S~I41S
Belmont Avenue. The lefe Mr.
Hell aarved in tha Second World
War and the Korean War. He
w It missed by his family and
friends.
Sarvice will be held In the Sends
Morfuery Limited "Pemily Chaprl
of Memories" on Tutsday, Auousf
7*. 1978. at t:l>0 p.m.. Rev. Father
Meurice Costelloe officietino.
SANDS—VICTORIA
184 MAI>LAM> AND 01 T I
OF PROVINCF.
I'ROrKRTlES
“160 ACRES
SIMPER I
ACRE
PRINCE GEORGE
\m
Brian Hurst
743-2544
Lorry Wilcox
746-6888
J. H. WHITTOME .nd Co,
LIMITED. DUNCAN. 74S4>3SI
3R? ACRKS
U\KEFRONT
29 miles west of Prince George.
<'00d roads all the wav to property
situated on Saxton Lake. For mere
info and appraisal, cal'
IdOHNK PKASfdANn
Bus S98-51J4 Res 384-9518
T. L. Mann & Associates Ltd.
DECATUR ISLAND
In the American San Juans, mid¬
point between Anacortes and Fri¬
day Harbour. acre tract, un¬
derground power end water, protec-
live covenants and restrictions,
Community beach, dock, airstrip.
$7500, terms. Mr. Baxter will
snow. (208) 324-1400. Remco. INC.
310 Harvard East, Seattle, 98102.
ALBERTA'S PEACE RIVER
COUNTRY: Building lot In White-
law. St.SOO — terms. 180 acres,
half cleared, on Hines Creek Hlgn-
way. $23,000 on terms, cash offers
considered Box 190, Berwyn, Al¬
berta, TOH OEO. Phone 597-3745.
PRIVATE^_
161 ACRE~FARM OR REC LAND
bv owner. Near Peace River,
Alberta. Next to lake. 35 dcres
cultivated. $18,000. Terms avail¬
able. Box 117, WhIteiBw, Alberta.
APPROXIMATELY 322* ACRES”l>f
the heart of the Cariboo. Open
orassland plus timber, lerge creek.
Priced to sell at $44,000. Reply to
Victoria Press Box 94,
ONE BEDROOM FURNISHED
unit on beautiful Lake Southerland
17 miles from Port Angeles.
$27,500. Cal|_Este8 Really, 4S7-a593.
GIBB: - In Vienna. BC. on
A^USI 18, 1978, Mr, WtIMam
Gibb, aged 78 veers, born in
Scotland and a resident of Vic-
tofle for the past 32 years, lete
residence. Suite 111, 3820 Shei-
bourne $t.; formeiiy of Pair-
view, Peace River, e.C. He
leaves his wKe, Christina, at
hnme; sons, Charles. Victoria,
B.C.d David, Victoria, B.C,
.lohn, Ontario, William Scott.
Sasketoon, Christopher. Victoria,
F. C, and Robert. Victoria, B.C ;
his daughter, Mrs. J. (Mariorle)
Hanson, Vancouver. B C ; 23
orandchlldren; 7 great-
prandchiirtren;' hl$ brother and
two listers In Scotland. Prede¬
ceased hv his son, Stanley, In
1944 while on active duty in
■talv.
Service will be held In the Sands
Mrrtuarv Limited, "Memorial
Chapel of Chimes;; on AAondav.
*'-'0ust 23, 1978 at 1:00 p.m. Mr.
nratafulty declined Those so desir-
70 mev coirfrlbtfta to the B C
St*"victo‘?l.""*i!'£T
SANOS-VtCTORlA
HAYNES — In Victoria, Auousi
20, 1978. Mrs. Emily Haynes In
her 88th veer. RnlOent here for
34 years, lormarly of Prince Al¬
bert. Sask. Predeceased by her
husband Arthur Winiam In 1980,
she is survived by her daughter
Mrs. C. T. (Emily) Bartle, with
whom she rasidad, and son
Ernest, West Vanceuer; 2 grand¬
children and 2 great grand¬
children; also her brother
Horace. In Prince Albert, Saskat-
chewan.
. Pun.Arai service will be In
MfCall Bros. FLORAL CHAPEL
nn Monday August 23, 1978 at 2 00
P.m. Intarmant at ^oyal Oak.
KIRKPATRICK — In Victoria on
August 21, 1978. AArs. Margaret
Catherine Kirkpatrick, wed 91
years, ton^rly of Saskatoon,
widow of Welter Lee Kirkpa-
irick. She leaves 3 daughters:
Mrs. Ken (Wilma) Grecnhalgh of
victoria, AArs. ClIHord (Wtricia)
Elliott of Toronto, Mrs. James
(Isabel) Price of Vancouver; 1
son, the Rev. Isaac W. M. Kirk
Patrick of Saskatoon; 9 grand¬
children and 8 graat-
orandchildran.
Funeral sarvki
. -1 sarvkas wiil be held on
Tuesday, Awoust 24, 1978. at 3:00
p.m. in First United Church, 932
Balmorei, with Rev. Scott Lalth of-
fictating. Flowers gratefully dt-
eilnad. McCall Bros, in charge of
arr angamants.
LEWIS — On August 19. In Vic¬
toria. Mr. Frank G. Lewis, aged
81 veara of 498 West Obed Roao,
tormerly of Sf. Stephan, Naw
Brunswick. Ha leaves ms loving
wife Carrie, 1 daughter Mrs. R.
f Dorothy) WtStendorf, Mill Bay,
1 son Gerald. Mitsissauaa, Ont.
4 granddaughters. Also 2 sisters
end 2 brothers In New Bruns¬
wick. He was a member oi the
Cenedlen Corps of Commls-
sionelrts.
Funerel servkc wilt be In
MoCell Brnthers FLORAL CHAP
FL -Tuesday August 2f 1978 el t VI
p m , Rev. Tony Roberts nfticiet-
Deaths and funerals
1>1':ATHS Hnd
FUNERALS
rilO FI NFRAL DIRECTORS
MAX
PEDERSON — In Sendringham
Privata hospital on August 19.
1978. Mr. Petar Norman Peder¬
son aged 97 years, formerly of
1048 Craigdarroch. He leaves one
sister in Kelowna. He served In
World War 1 with tha Princeu
Patricia Light Infantry.
Funeral sarvice will be in
AAcCall Bros. FAMILY CHAPEL
on Tuesday Airaust 24, 1978 at 3:15
P.m.. Tony Roberts officiating. In¬
terment at Royal Oak.
ROBERTON — In Victoria. B.C.,
on August 20, 1978. Mr. Alex¬
ander Russell Robarton. aged 73
years, born In Glasgow, Scot¬
land. and a resident of Victoria
tor me pest 40 years, lata resi¬
dence Suite 205—200 <3orge Road
West. He leaves his sons, Oenitt,
Kimberlfv, B.C-; Gordon, Van¬
couver, B.C.; daughter^ Mrs.
Stan (Janet) Janzen. Duncan.
B.C., and Mrs. Gordon (Eileen)
Cockturn, Cenvjbell River, B.C.;
six grandchildren: his sister,
M'S. Gretta Masterman, Surrtv.
B.C., and his brother. Richard
Rfherton, 1 lovdminster, Alberta
Service will be held In the Sends
A'ortonrv Limited, "Memo'iai
Chapel of Chimes." on Wedi^sdav,
August ’s. 1978. at 100 p.m . Rev
A, Caider oHIciatlng Flowers
oratefiilly derllntd. Tho«e so r'esi--
ihg may contribute to the charily
ol their -hoire
SANDS-VICTORIA
. Metro Max passed away^ -
in Victoria, B.C. on August ISth,*^^
1976. born In Buchanan, Saskai-
chtwan and a rasidant of Vic¬
toria sinca 1943. Ha is survived
by his loving wife. Agnas. 3
brothers in Buchanan, Sask. and
one brother in Kitimat, B.C., his
sistar In California. U.S.A.:
nitces and naohaws. AAr. Max
was a membar of Aerit No. 12,
F.O.E., Victoria. B.C.
Service will be held In the Sands
Mortuary Limited. "Memorial
Chapel of Chimes", on Wednesdev,
August 2Slh, 1978, at 2:00 p.m To
be conducted bv Mr. Roy Banner-
man. Flowers gratetully declined.
Those so desiring may contribute
to the Canadian Cancer Society,
837 Caledonia Ave., Victoria, B.C.
SANDS-VICTORIA
McADAM — In Vtcforla, August
19. 1978 Mrs. Oliva Alice Mc-
Adam, aged 75 veers, ol 912 Mt.
Newton cross Road. RastdenI m
Victoria for 35 years, formerly
of Prince Albert sask. Prede¬
ceased by her husband Herbert
Wiiliem in 1968. she is survived
by 2 daughters Mrs A.
(Dorothy) Lincoln, Sidney, Mrs,
E. (Marqeruite) Elchhorn, Sid¬
ney; 2 sons, David Ronald, Ed¬
monton, Herbert "Bert", vic¬
toria; 13 grandchildren and 9
great grandchildren, also rela¬
tives in England.
Funeral service will be In
McCall Bros. FLORAL CHAPEL
on Tuesday August 24. 1976 at 2:15
P.m., Rev.' Ivan Futter offidatlng.
NOON — On August 18. 1976 at the
AAemorial Pavilion. Royal Jubi¬
lee Hospital. William Arthur
Noon, aged 95 years. Pre<to-
ceased by his loving wife, Ann.
In July, W78, In their 65th year
of marriage; his son, Victor, in
1971; his daughter. Margery, in
1928. He is survived bv his ton.
Leslie Arthur Noon. and
tlauohter-ln-taw. Jean Noon, of
Victoria: five grandchildren,
Mrs. Marjorie Baker of tjewton,
Iowa, Mrs. Brenda Good of Van¬
couver, B.Cj, Mrs. Phvtiis Tavior
of Victorid, Mrs. Patsy Ann
Moran of Parkivllie and William
Noon of Vktoria. Ha was a vat-
eran of World War t.
Funeral service will be In Sf.
Mary's Church Chaoal, I70t Flqln
Rd., on Monday. August 23, 1976 at
2:00 p.m., tha Van. Arch H. J
Jones officiating. McCall fires. In
charge of arrangensents.
ROBISON — On August 19. 1978 in
Victoria. James Gordon Robison,
aged 86 years, of 170) Cedar Hill
X Rd., a native ton. He leaves 1
daughter, Mrs, P. D. (Faith)
Sivertsen of Victoria: 2 grand¬
children, Peter and Wendy; also
1 sister, Mrs. L. MacLaurIn of
Hemet, Calif. He was a mamber
of Capital City LodQt No. 61 K
of P and Tele Mahuta Temple
No. 155 D.O.K.K. arxt (Sold-
stream Lodoe No. 17 A.F. and
-A.M. He served 4gr 10 vears on
the Board of Pearkes Clinic
for Handicapped Children:
A private funeral service will be
In McCall Bros. FAMILY CHAPEL
on Monday. Auoust 23. at 3:00
p.m., Rev. David Smith efficlsting.
SHOTTON — Jean Woodward, on
August 10, 1976, born in Nova
Scotia, lata residence, 618 Bry-
den Court, Victoria, B.C. Sur¬
vived by her husband, Robert
and daughter Pet at home; pre¬
deceased by • son,. Robert John;
elso survived by two sisters.
Mrs. J. Christianson. Dartmouth,
Nova Scotia end Mrs. m.
Armstrong, Wolfvllie, Nove Sco¬
tia end her brother. Phillip
Sourr, Weston-Super-Mere. Eng¬
land.
Service will be held in the Sands
Moriuery Limlied. "Memorial
Chapel of Chimes," on Mondav.
August 23, 1978, at 3:15 P.m. Arch¬
deacon G. H. Greenhaigh olficiat-
Ing. Flowers orateruily declined.
Those so desiring may contribute
to the Victoria Cancer Clinic. 1900
Fort St . Victoria, B.C.
SANDS — VICTORIA
ST. GERMAINE: - Suddanly In
Vancouver on August )Bfh, 1978,
Mr. T. E. (Eddie) St. Germaine,
aged 55 years, and lata of MSO
Graveley Sf., Vancouver. sT,
Mr. St. Germaine lointd the
Winnipeg Grtnedieri In 1939,
served in Jameica and Hong
Kong. (P.O.W. for 4 years). He
was a very active member of
Branch 179. R.c. Legion end also
the Hong Kong Veterans Associ¬
ation. Survived by hi$ dear wife,
Anne, five sons, relatives and
many friends in Victorie, Ven-
couver and Winnipeg.
Funeral service will be held
Moi^y, August 23rd at 10 a.m, in
St. Francis Church. Stmlln Drive
•"O Napier St., Vancouver, with
Father Rosia officiating. A Memo-
lewn Chapel, 1669 East Broadway
SI,. Vancouver on Sunday. August
2?nd at 7:X p.m. Capt, Rev. U.
Laita. D. 0., M.C, In tendance.
-•KMI-A CARDA OF THANKS
“■WE^WISH^TO' THANK^ OUR
friends and neighbours for their
kindness and tympethy and the
beautiful ftorpi oHtrlngs during
our recent loss of our mother.
Mrs. Jeanne Bielr Estlln, end also
extend gretefuti thanks to Dr. M S
Wirk. and thp Oak Bay Police
Dept. Edward, Gordon. Howard,
Eugene, and Robin Estlln.
We wish to exoreu our sincere
appreciation to ell our friends for
their many kind thoughts over the
lost of our Dan. John and Roberta
Mawer and fefnily.
:m IN MKMORIAMR
KARAGIANIS — In loving memo¬
ry of my husband John Melvin
w^ passed away August 22nd,
I miss you from our home Dear
I miss you from your place
A shadow O'er my life is cast,
i miss the sunshine of your face
I miss your kind and willing
hand
Your fond and earnest care
Home is dark without you dear
I miss you every where.
Sadly missed by wire Margaret.
KARAGIANIS — John Melvin In
loving femory of dear D«d who
passed asvev August 22nd. 1971,
The month of August comes with
reflrei
It brings beck memories I shell
never forget
You fell eeleep without good-bve
But the memory of you will
never <5le,
Aiwgys remembered bv deuohter
Linda.
YATES — In loving memory of
our deer Ded, Normen Yates,
died Aug. 21. 1997.
Though your smiling face we
cannot sec.
Your hands we cannot touch.
We Shalt never lose the memory,
Of the Ded we loved so much.
Ever In thoughts and heeris of
vour loving daughters — Lilian
and Edith.
THEY SHALL GROW NOT OLD,
AS WE WHO ARE LEFT GROW
OLD, AGE SHALL ^T WEARY
THEM. NOR THE YEARS CON¬
DEMN, AT THE GOING DOWN
OF THE SUN. AND IN THE
MORNING. WE WILL REMEM¬
BER THEM
WITH GRATITUDE, SANDS.
MONDAY
ROBINSON. Mr. Robin ILloydl
1:00 p.m.—FAMILY CHAPEL
NOON. Mr William
2:00 p.m.-ST. MARY'S CHAPEL
HAYNES. Mrs. Emily
2:00 p,m.—FLORAL CHAPEL
BEASLEY, Mr, Percy
2:30 p.m.—CHRIST CHURCH
CATHEDRAL
ROBISON. Mr. James
PRIVATE SERVICE
3:00 p m,—FAMILY CHAPEL
TUESDAY
AIRD. Miss OUve
10:30 a.m. FAMILY CHAPEL
FAIRCHILD. Mr..George
PRIVATE,SER\?ICE
11:00 a m.- O.V.A CHAPEL
EDWARDS. Mrs. Pearl '
1-00 p.m.—FAMILY CHAPEL
CUNNINGHAM. Mrs. Wllmina
1:15 om.—FLORAL CHAPEL^
McAOAM. Mrs. Olive
2:15 pm.-FLORAL CHAPEL
PETERSON. Mr. Peter
3:15 p.m.—FAMILY CHAPEL
LEWIS, Mr. Frank
4:30 p.m.—FLORAL CHAPEL
. WEDNESDAY
EGO. Mr. W. Rav
I0:» a m.-FLORAL CHAPEL
McCALL BROS.
Floral Funeral ChapelB
Mfi:
SERVING
VANCOUVER
ISLAND
we CARE
Dedicated to service
Sensible Prices
SANDS FUNERAL
CHAPELS
VKJORIA 388-5155
SIDNEY 458-2932
COLWOOO 478-3821
DUNCAN 746-5217
LADYSMITH 245 2331
NANAIMO 753-2032
Your seven cemmunitv Chapelt,
Independently Family Owned end
Controlled. Sands since 19)2.
MaroasM
uiBcrwfi
aKM*f«;MMt
VICTORIA, 388-5)55
SIDNEY. 656-2932
COLWOOD. 478-382)
DUNCAN, 748*52)2
LADYSMITH. 245-233)
NANAIMO, 753-2032
Removal And
Service Arrangement
Covering Vancouver Island
A Division of Sands
WHIPPLETREE’S
FIRST
AUCTION
at
WHIPPLETREE JUNCTION
(3 ml. South of Duncan)
SUNDAY 11 A.M.
Buggies - HEARSE
BARS (Salosal
BRASSWARE
oak-oak-oak
FURNISHINGS
PHONOGRAPHS
Hundreds of Items
Collectiblee
Sal«AclinlMionS2.00
cradit on purehata
No chMii for PREVIEW
SATURDAY
NoPata
KILSHAWS
AUCTIONEERS LTD.
For furlhar information
phono Duncan 74I-1100
TINDERS FOR INIURANCt
Sealad tandarsaddressad to Mr. L.
Traioar, menagtr. Royal Oak Burial
Park, 4673 Falelsa Drivt, Victoria,
B.C., VIY 1B4, for insuranct
coveraga for fire, theft, liability, ate.
will be accepted up to and Including
the 2(tth day ot Saptembar at 13
o'clock noon. Pull particulars may
be obtained fromatha ottica at the
Royal Oak Burial Nark, 4873 Palalsa
Drive. Victoria. B.C. The lowest or
any tender not.nacesiarlly accepted.
L. TRELOAR, Sac.-Traas.
Board ot CemdiBi% Trustees
of Greeter Victoria
SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 82
(SOOKB)
DRMOLITiON TENORR
Tenders are called tor the demoll*
tion of 3 wood buildings situated at
3087 Jacklln Road.
Bids will be accapted by the
Seeretary-Tfeasurer, School
District No. 83 (Sooka) on or before
4 00 p.m. Monday, August 30th, 1978.
Oemolition must be compittad on or
before Monday, September 30th,
1978.
I nstructloni to bidders may be eb*
telned at the School Board Office,
2227 SooKe Road, Victoria, itf.C.
M. P. Rudga.
Sacratary-Traasurer,
School District No. 63
(Sooka).
3727 Sooke Road,
Victorie, B.C.
TENDER FOR SAWLOGS
Sealed tenders on forma provided
)y the District will be accepted up to
>oon of Wednesday, September 1st,
1978 for the purchase of approx-
.mately 2,000,000 t.b m. ot sawlogs
delivered to Victoria, Mill Bay,
Cowichan or Saseenos. The tender
forms provided by the District are a
combined otter to purchase and con¬
ditional sales agreement. This form,
If not completed in detail by the
Tenderer, shall be rejected and not
considered.
The highest or any tender will not
necessarily ba accepted
Greater Victoria Water
District,
479 island Highway,
Victoria, B.C V9B IH7
Lender for sawlocs
Sealad tender'i-on forms provided
by the District will be accepted up to
noon of Wednesday, Septambar ist,
1978 -ter tha purchase of approx-
i'*^atelv 2.000,000 f.b.m. of sawlogs
delivered to Victoria, Milt Bay,
Cowichan or Saseenos. The tender
forms provided by the District are a
combined ottar to purchase and con¬
ditional sales agraemant. This form,
if rtot completed In detail by the
Tenderer, shall be rejected and not
considered.
The highest or any lender will not
necessarily ba acceptad.
Graater Victoria Watar
District,
479 Island Highway,
Victoria, B.C. V9B IH7
IN THI SUPREME COURT
OP BRITISH COLUMBIA
IN PROBATE
IN THE MATTER OP THE
ESTATE OP LEONARD RENE
PETTIOREW atherwlsa hnawn
as LEONARD PETTIGREW,
LATE OF 4-805 DOUGLAS
STREET, VICTORIA, BRITISH
COLUMBIA, DECEASED.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
cradltors and others having claims
against tha Estate of the above
named deceased ere hereby re¬
quired to send them to Messrs. Cook,
Roberts A Whittaker, Berrlsttrs and
Solicitors, Fourth Floor, 777 Port
Street, Victoria, B.C., on or before
the 20th day of Saptembar, 1978,
attar which data tha estate will ba
distributed, having regard only to
claims of which they than have had
notice.
HEATHER OLIVE
ATKINSON and
PATRICIA DAVIS
! Executrices
; BY COOK, ROBERTS 8
I WHITTAKER
I Fourth Floor, 777 Fort Street
Victoria, British Columbia
I
Solicitors
Specialising m
lorwarding to or from
anywhere
WORLD WIDE FUNERAL
INFOR.MATION SERVICE
rail collect
or cable
‘■Mortuary' Victoria”
A Division of Sands
J. cyeapmif^
(S^TVir^
1' uneral Chapels
1625 Quacira SL
284-2612 - 386-350&
CUNNINGHAM
FUNERAL CHAPEL
1155 Fort Street
Phone 384-5512 or 384-8826
Offering dignified moderaU sen
vKa for all. Gto. S. Cunningham,
vwrter, manager.
FIRST MEMORIAL SERVICES
Serving the Public er>d Exclusive
Undertakers tor the Memoriat
society or B.C. 658-5244,
sii MOM;Mi!:\rAL.s
STEWART MONUMENTAL
Works Ltd.
ESTABLISHED 1198
Memorial cf Distinction
Msrbie ftreolace and tabletops
140 2 Mey St. _ 384-3452
"The Finest In Craftsmanship"
MORTIMER'S MONUMENTS
.'MlSCfcU,ANKOUR
’"m^orial sbei ety*^f“b c™
Founded 1956
Dlgnilied Final Arranpements
At Minimum Coat
Brochure and fuli details
from the VICTORIA branch
Rm. 101, 727 Johnson Street
Victoria
38S-52I4 (24 hours)
Liletime Membership 85
IN ME/AORIAL DONATIONS '
to be used exclusively for
CANCER REASERCH
Should be directed to
CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY
857 Caledonia Ave., Victoria.
PHONE
386-8448
FOR
IMMEDIATE
CASH!
tor your housBhoid lumlBhingS,
tools, appliances, boats, cars,
campers, stamps, coins, china,
glass, gold, silver antiques and
all collectables.
THE
AUCTION
GALLERY
166 YATES ST.. ViaORIA
AUirnON SALES
EVERY
WED. 7:00 P.M.
Always the finest and largest selec¬
tion ol auction merchandlaa in Vw-
toria. Your goods ptoked up im¬
mediately.
NO WAITING
w« have our own truck# to serve you
ESTATES <HANOLEO
with eftieienoy and
understanding
Cash or Consignment
er Ed Moodle ef
THE
AUCTION GALLERY
MMe Nr 304 Has csfM ala«
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THB MATTER OP THE
ESTATE OP ALFRED
CAMERON EVANS, LATE OP
NO. 3I1-47B DALLAS ROAO, IN
THE CITY OP VICTORIA, IN
THE PROVINCE OP BRITIfiH
COLUMBIA, DECEASED
CREDITORS and others having^
claims against the above Estate ere '
V riKiulred to sand lull particulars ef i
' such Claims to Jessie Falconer 1
I Evans and Canada Permanent Trust
Company,. P.O. Box 1233, Victoria, |
B.C., on or before the 30th day {
of September, 1976, after which date
the Estate's assets will be dis¬
tributed havino regard only to
claims of which fht Exacutors shall
havt rectived notice.
DATED at Victoria, British
Columbia this 17th day of August,
1976.
Jtssit Falconar Evans, and
CANADA PERMANENT
TRUST COMPANY
P.O. Box 1237, Victoria, B.C.
Exacutors
By iheir Solicitors.
CAMERON, BURNS A COMPANY
811-820 Viaw Straet
Victoria, B.C.
DEPARTMENT OP LANDS.
FORESTS,
ANO WATER RESOURCES
WATER RESOURCES SERVICE
POLLUTION CONTROL BRANCH
APPLICATION FOR A PERMIT
UNDER THE
POLLUTION CONTROL ACT, IM?
(EMISSIONS)
This application Is to ba filed with
the Director, Poflutlon Control
Branch, Parllanstnt Buildings, Vic¬
toria. British Columbia. Any parson
who auailtles as an obiactor under
section 13 (3) of the Pollution Control
Act. 1987 may,'within 30 days of the
data of application, or within 30 days
of the date of publication in Tha
British Columbia Gazette or in a
newspapar, or, where service is re¬
quired. within 30 days of the serving
ot a copy of the application, file with
the Director an oblection in writing
to the granting of a permit, stating
tha manner In which ha is aHactad.
Those who do not so qualify may file
with the Pollution Control Board an
obiactlon in writing under section
13 (8), in the same manner and time
period as described above.
1. I. Butler Brothers Supplier Ltd. of
P.O. BOX 4066, Station "A," Vic¬
toria, B.C., hereby apply to tha
Director for a permit to discharge
or emit contaminant(s) Into the
air from Cement Silos located at
405 Bay Street, Victqrle, B.C., and
give notice of my apgiicatlon to
ail parsons atfactod.
2. Tho land upon which tho works
or# locatod .Lots 13 and U Block
.L, Bay Stratf between Bridge and
Turner Straats, victoria, E.C.
3. Tha discharge or amiulon shall
ba locatod ot tho top of tho comtnt
silos.
4. The rate ef discharge Is (dry
basis);
(a) Maximum 1700; Duration 10
hours; Frequency 4 times
month.
(b) Avtregc dally (based on nor¬
mal daily operating period)
-1700. The operating period
during which contaminants
will be discharged is 4 days
per month — 10 hours per day.
5. The characteristics ot the con-
teminant(s) to be discharged are
as follows: (Insert values after
completion of Table (c), column
(ID on reverse side.)Cement
Dust. Total particulate — grains
per S.C.F. 0.10.
8. The type of treatment to be ap¬
plied to the contaminant (s) Is as
follows; Two compartment 64 bag
dust coliactor.
7.1 Raymond J. McManaman, assis¬
tant sacratary-traasurar, hereby
certify that a copy of this applica¬
tion has been received by the
Regional District of Capital
Regional District.
R. J. McManaman
I. This application, dated on the 9th
day of August, 1978, was posted on
tha orou"''acc'rdanct with the
r«.,iution Control Regulations.
Alan F. Wright
k-dtiF WrUtuiiibi 15.L'., Sunday, August 22, 1976 51
Advertising
helps you
to know.
Lumts
936 FORT ST
ESTATE
AUCTION
for tha
CANADA TRUST CO.
To ctoM tho ootalo of
NEVILLE MUNSON
formorlyof
COBBLE HILL. B.C.
and from othor tourooa
TUES. 7 P.M.
COLOUR TV SETS
(CofwolB, ManM
Sovoril
CHESTERRELD SUITES
PAIR OF LOVE SEATS
"KRUB” END TABLES 8
CORNER WHAT-NOT
BRASS RRESiOE PIECES
CHINA-BLAS8-BRA8S
CARRIAGE CLOCK
OIAMONO ENGAGEMENT SET
OAK
SECTIONAL BOOKCASES
LIBRARY TABLE
, AND CHAIRS
OFFICE DESK-HALL SEA1
FOOTSTOOL-BENCH
(Nfd l ipoint)
TYPEWRITERS
SMAU APPL.
BEDROOM FURNISHINGS
EARLY ' PLAYTIME"
HAND4)PBUTQ WA8HBI
(NmCandWon)
CU88ICCAR
HDMTK MOW ESTATE
1M7CADIL1AC SEDAN
« 2 . 0 D 0 MIIm
lb ba add
FRIDAY. 1:15 P.M.
ON VIEW
MORNING OF SALE
NETE: Arrangamanta muat
ba mad# to rameva ear aama
3 EG- 33 M
HARD OF HEARING?
Sound Is
delivered to ear
by plastic tube.
FOOLIN’
Wa’v6 all the makin’s
for
ANOTHER .
GIGANTIC
'll Bnaymsi as mifeAi
Presented by:
VILLAGE AUCTION LTD.
... The data is Tuesday, August 24th and tha time is 7.30
p.m. at Village Auctions first evening at tha Hotyrood House in Vic¬
toria.
The preview is over, the people have taken their seats and
now that draaaar near the stage ... you should ba able to hear it
now!
"A hundred dollera ... a hundred somewhere? Will someone
give me a hundre<3 dollars? Fifty dollars theni ... will someone
start the bidding at fifty dollars? ... all right then, twenty-five dol¬
lars ... twenty-nve dollars ~ thank you ... I have an 0 (toning bid
of twenty-five dollars, and now the antique auction is under way
again.
Prom every nook and cranny In tha British Isles the items
have come, from estate sales and house clearances, purchased
for the purpose of transporting them to Western Canada and on to
village Auction.
At Village Auction our job Is simple—just number the item,
hold It up In the air and let our audience decide who will ba the
new owner.
We always think'we have just the right pieces for everyone s
home and this sale is no different. For Instance ... an elegant 6-
plece Sheraton-styie dining room suite, a rare Art Nouveau four-
piece bedroom suite, three superb brass beds, an oak bow front
china cabinet, three large mirrored back display serving
sideboards, two good quality pianos, a Sheraton-styla china
cabinet, 'hallstands, an antique grandfather clock, a drop front
desk, pump organ, washstands. oak tablet, chairs, lounges, brass
jelly pans, pewter collectables, jug and basin sett, flo blue china
pieces, hanging brass oil lamp, mantel chime clocks, delicate
oriental china dessert sarvice. roll top office desk, barley twist oak
occasional tables, brassware galore. Victorian banquet table
lamps, pantry treenware. crock cannisters. assorted framed pic¬
tures and prints, old fashioned parlor phonograph, wall mirrors,
duchess dressers, upholstered piano benches . . . and these
Items are just the beginning of our fine 2*day sale.
PLACE: HOLYROOD HOUSE
231SBlBnBhard SfrDDi,
Victoria, B.C. Phone 383*8133
TIME: TUESDAY—Ai|Mt 241k, it 7:30 p.a.
WEDNESDAY—Aifvst 25tk, M 7:30 f.m.
PREVIEW : TUESDAY. iUiitt 24tk. frea
NOON Ml SALE TIME F 7:30 p.a.
Sound Is picked
up by microphone
here.
Open aar procaas developed
especially for nerve deafness
The Ciarftler CROS* Instrument has been designed to
make it possible for men. women and children with
nerve deafness to find new hearing happiness.
This open ear process, with just a tiny plastic tube
leading into your ear. may be what you have been look¬
ing for. If you have been dissatisfied with your hearing
aid or have hesitated to wear one because it looks and
feels clumsy or uncomfortable. Dahiberg offers you a
practical alternative with the new Clarifier Cros.
‘The Clarifier CROS is not a bone conduction aid and is
not confined to eyeglass stylee. The CROS principle is
also available in behind-the-ear models.
DAHLBERG HEARING AID SERVICE
Th» Bay, Third Floor
1701 Douglat St., Victoria, B.C.
Phona 385-S414 or 385-1311
^Ttson^^aj) (Company
PUBUC WORKS DIVISION
09MITMBIT V NRNWXTI m nMUC mmt
property FOR SALE
OFFERS tralnvHad by tha
Hdti. AIbx V. FrBBBT
MlnlBlDT of Highways and Publle WortiB
Parliament Buildings. Victoria, British Columbia, for the following
land and improvements;
ADMESS: 55 Ceneda Avenue, Duncan. B,C.
LEfiALKSemPTtON: Lot A of Lot 4 and Lot B of Lot 5.
Block 1, Section 17. Range 6.
Ouemichen District. Plan 2070.
end Lot 1. Section 17. Range 6.
Ouemichan District. Plan 3100.
Approximately 6.330 square feet.
Former Coach Lines depot.
Average quality, one-storey con¬
crete block building with .stucco
finish; Brea; 1,700 square feet;
blacktop 3,350 square feet.
Commercial downtown (CO)
8100,000.00
These Offers are eublect to any sxltflng right of first refutti
to purchase the property.
^aled Offart will ba raealvsd up to 2 P.M. on Wadntaday. tha tat
day of September, 1076 at tha Office of tha Superintendent ot
Works, Departmentof Public Works. 806 Clovardale Avenue Vic¬
toria. Britten Columbia. V8X 2S9.
The loweat or any otter will not necesserily be accepted. Inquiries
mey be directed to Ihe Conlrecls Adminisirelor at 387-5790.
G. L. GILES.
Deputy Mlnittar
August, 1978.
mim.
IMPgOVEMfflTS:
Z0NIN6:
I9E88ITMAIKET VALUE:
OXFORD
POODS
271 COOK STREET
Open Daily 9-9; Sunday 10-7
PdoM effective;
Sun., Aug. 22. ta Tuas., Aug. 24
MJB m
INSTANT „„ 5
COPPBI V C
m
BURNS
WIENERS 2 D
CHALLENQER P
SOCKIYK 1
SALMON V 1
|19
APPLE K
JUICE “lir U
9^
§S.™ - 1
139
peas" 6
J^Y 4 Q
PDWDERS Z U
9*
SURF . •
DETERGENT
169
1
52 SDflUp Colonist Victona. B.C., Sunday. August 22. ly76
Send no money now, pay C.O.D, charges later
HAYMARKFT, Va. (UPD—A package anived
at the home of Danny W. Ten-ant last week — five
pounds of his own gai-bage.
The neatly-wTapped package was the gift of
Reuter Laboratories, whose custodians had noticed
that someone had been suireptitiously dumping
garbage in the firm’s refuse bins.
After vigils failed to catch the culprit, the cus¬
todians poi-ed through ttie refuse and two days of
grubbing amid the canteloupe and coffee gixtunds
later, they found an envelope with Terrant’s name
and addi-ess on it.
Robert E. Beacham, grounds supervisors at
Reuters, said custodians packed a box full of the
i-efuse and had it deliver^ to Terrant at a cost of
$ljO.
“We figured if we shipped it C.O.D. he wouldn't
pay for it,” said Beachani. "We even enclosed a
packing slip.”
An accompanying letter signed by Beacham,
lead in part;
“Dear Mr. Terrant:
"Under separate cover we are returning to you
a box of disposable goods that were left in the ^r-
bage i-eceptacle here at Reuter Laboratories.
“While we certainly appreciate your efforts in
cleaning up the environment, we would oply ask
that you find another receptacle for your disposable
matter.”
. Terrant was not available for comment, but his
wife was — and she appai-ently didn’t know any¬
thing about iL
“I knew he was putting it somewhere but I
didn't know where.” she said. “We just recently
moved here and we haven’t arranged for garbage
sei-vice yet.”
The box was still unopened, awaiting her hus-
Ijand's return fi-om work.
“He pixtbably won't think it’s too funny,” she
.said.
the
DAYS
The doors blast open at nine-thirty Monday morning. Personal shopping only,
no phone calls, mail or C.O.D. orders. Three inflation-fighting days only.
BIG. BIG. BIC
VALUE FOR BACK
TO SCHOOL
Stand back. You get 2 blue
pens.-l red pen. 1 green pen
and 2 black pens. All for:
.88
School Suppllat. (Main)
300 SHEETS OF
COPY PAPER
Pages and pages for rough
thinking, rough typing and tak¬
ing notes.
.88
School Supplies, (Main)
CANDY
Campflr. nurthmallowa. 11-oz.
bag.
2 pkg. .88
Ouallly awMltCoconut and coffee
flavoured.
LB. .88
Barkw and DobMn mints Qiaced.
LB. .88
Candy Bar, (Main)
NOTIONS
AII-purpoM aluminum hangwa.
Get your closet organized. Pkg. of
six.
Each, 2.88
Slack rack holds S pairs of slacks.
Each, 1.88
S-liar skirt hangar. Now you can
have more room for your clothes.
Each, 2.88
Utility boxes. Self-stacking, ideal
for storing stuff.
Each, .88
Wallata. Get your guy a wallet. As¬
sorted.
Each,1.88
Manicure sets. Assorted.
Each, .88
Notions, (Main)
HOME and OFFICE NEEDS
Adding machine rolls.
2 for .88
Sccttla Brown Envelopes. 7
envelopes per pkg.
5 Pkg. .88
Handcrafted clutch waUat and
keyring set. Nice.
Each, 3.88
Klear-iVu photo albums. Holds 24
photos, 3Vi”x3Vi".
Each, .88
Slationery,%lain)
HEALTH and BEAUTY AIDS
Johnson’s Baby Shampoo450 ml.
Each,1.88
Coppertona tanning butter. IH-oz.
Each .88
Coppertona QT Quick Tanning Lo¬
tion. IVi-oz. tube.
Each, .88
Colgate 100 mouthwash. 750 ml.
Each, 1.88
Wahl pro dryer/stylar. Pistol Grip,
air concentrator.
Baycrast vibrator/massagsr. Fo
attachments.
Each, 8.88
Health and Beauty Aids, (Main)
FASHION ACCESSORIES
Print scarves. Big assortment, lots
of colours. oo ii 0(1
Each,.O0-4.00
Tops and blouses assortment T’s.
tanks, tops and blouses.
Each, 4.88
Slippers, suppers. Slippers As¬
sortment of easy-wearing slippers
in soft, soft pastels.
Palr,.88''2.48
Fashion Accessories, (Main)
JEWELLERY
Great big grab box of assorted
jawaUery. Grab yourself a fashion
value. Any piece of pastel beads,
pastel chokers or pastel earrings.
Chokers and chokers of pretend
coral. Lots of super Cinabar beads
and chokers, and strings and
strings of pretend shell necklaces.
Treat yourself to several pieces.
Place,. 88
Jewellery, (Main)
WICKER BASKETS
FOR DRIED FLOWERS
Fill them with flowers and
you’re on your way to
Christmas presents for under
$5.
.88
The Basket Shop, (Third)
BIG GLASS
BEVERAGE GLASS
Get ready for' fall parties by
stocking up on beverage glas¬
ses. 12 oz. size.
.88
Chine, (Third)
DAILY STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY TO 9:30 P.M.
PHONE 386-1311. FREE CUSTOMER PARKING
A THOUSAND INCHES
OF SCOTCH TAPE
Everyone knows — You can fix
anything with Scotch tape, '/i-
inch width.
3/88
School Supplies, (Main)
Each. 24.88/r
BUY A GUY
A LEATHER
BELT.
2.88
Men’s Wear (mainjf
ONE GALLON OF
COLEMAN FUEL
It's fuellsh not to buy at this
price.
1.88
Sporting Goods, (Downstairs)
FOUR ROLLS
OF DELSEY
TOILET TISSUE
Get In early for this one. (And
wear your runners.) Pink only.
Limit 2 pkgs. per person.
4 ,.... .88
Heafth and Beauty Aids, (Main)
UNDERFASHIONS
Ladies evening half slips. Van
Raalte taffeknit Antron III with deep
side slash, smooth shell
embroidery trim. S.M.L. White,
skin.
Each,4.88
Underlaahlon (Second)
SUMMER LOUNGE WEAR
Indian gausas. Treat yourself to a
romantic Indian gauze to wear by
the fire this winter. Also sundresses
priced right for Indian summer. In
polka dots and shirred styles. Be
smart, make a fashion buy at an
eighty-eight cent sale price. S.M.L.
Each, 4.88
Ladies tops. Top off your siacks
and skirts with bargain priced tops.
Come try on our values. Big selec¬
tion of blouses, shirts, T-shirts and
sweaters. Broken sizes but big as¬
sortment.
Each, 4.88
Sportswear, (second)
DECORATIVE
ACCESSORIES
Butterfly candles. Delightful but¬
terfly patterned pillar candles.
Each. 2.88
Decorative Accessories, (Third)
PATCH THE WORLD
WITH 2 POUNDS
OF POLYFIUA
.88
Hardware, (Downstairs)
CREST. COLGATE
AND CLOSEUP
TOOTHPASTE
Assortment of your family's
favourite brands. 750 ml. size.
.88
Health and Beauty Aids, (Main)
BIG FAT SOLO
DECORATOR BULBS
100 watt ball lamps for super
modern decor. Look at this
price:
.88
The Lamp Shop, (Fourth)
CHINA/GLASSWARE
Christine tumblers and stamwara.
Hi-balls, champagnes and wines.
Popular modern style.
Each, 1.88
Schaurich pottery aahtraya.
Earthtone accent these attractive
and useful ashtrays.
Each, 3>88
China and Glassware, (Third)
STAPLES
Texmada pillowcasas. 50%
poly/50% cotton. 42x33”.
Each, 2.88
HOUSEWARES
Barlbeau cheesa boards.
Hardwood boards with stainless
steel cheese knife. Nice gift.
Each, 2.88
Inn Keeper glaaa cannister set. 3
glass cannisters with cork stop¬
pers.
Each, 3.88
Metal enamelled aarving trays. 12-
inch diameter with geometric sur¬
face patterns.
Each 1.88
SPORTING GOODS
Kiwi silicone suede spray.
For suede waterproofing.
Each, .88
Snorkles.
Each,
1.88
BARBECUE NEEDS
Charcoal briquettes. 72.
Each, 2.88
BBQ tools. 5-pce. set in tempered
steel with wooden handles. Skewer,
tongs, brush, fork and spatula.
Sat, 8.88
'Stalnleea steel barbecue aet. 5
pees.
Set, 4.88
Barbeaiaa, (2nd level parkade)
Bicycle water bottles.
Plastic with metal holder.
Each, 1.88
ERA goH balls.
3 for 2.88
Canoe paddles. Each, 8.88
66" wood laminate.
Sporting Goods, (Downstairs)
Slyrafoam coolers.
40-quart size approx.
Each, 3.88
HARDWARE
Drive and Sava radiator flush. 15'
ozs.
Each, .88
18-oz. Turtle Wax,
Each, 1.88
Hardware, (Downstairs)
GARDEN SHOP
e-S-S all-purpose fertilizer. Green
Valley organic.
Each, 5.88
Hydroponic plant nursery.
Each, 6.88
4-7 Inch plastic pots. White, yellow,
green, oranQe. Assorted shapes.
Each,88
Plastic plant mistsrsl Orange,
brown.
Each,1.88
Andrews soaker hose
30-feet.
50-feet.
Each, 4. 88
Each, 6.88
Garden Shop, (2nd level Parkade)
BAYMART
Tigar mats. 24x34".
Each, .88
Shraddad loam pillows. 16x24".
Each, 1.88
Camping Blankets. Grey with red
and yeliow stripe. 72x60".
Each, 3.88
Men’s short sleeve dress shirts.
Plain and fancy, poly and cotton.
Broken sizes.
Each, 3.88
Men's ties. 4 inches wide.
Each, 2.88
Men’s joggers. White, navy blue in
leather and suede. Sizes 9-11.
Pair, 3.88
Women’s sandals. Big assortment
in sizes 5-9.
Pair, 5.88
Boy’s and girl’s tanks and t’s. Big
assortment in cotton and poly.
Each,. 88
Boy’s casual pants. With 2 front
pockets, belt loops in assorted
checks and plains. Sizes 8-16.
Pair, 2.88
Girl’s short sleeve blouses. As¬
sorted prints in 100% nylon. 4-14.
Each, 1.88
Baymart, (Lower Main)
P.S.
DONT
FORGET
YOUR
BAY
CHARGE
CARD
AYMIOOFIMinMIir
FASNIIIN HUHHC
Big assortment of prints In cot¬
tons and poly blends. Sew neat.
.88
Baymart Fabrics, (Downstairs)
TERRIHC TERRY
SOCKS FROM BAYMART
Good colours, good terry and
you know he needs more
socks.
.88
PAIR
Baymart Man’s Furnishings,
(Downstairs)
:^ubsoite^aft(!ktpai^
1
No. 214—118th Year
VICTORU, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 22, 1976
***
15c Daily, 30c Sunday
Island
Financial Centra
4U5 Trunk Road
Ph. 74ft-618i
Duncan
Vancouver hland's leading netc$paper since 1858
A; 3^
Cloudy^
high 19
Weatker DetalU
On Pace S
South African ^despair^
Tribal leaders
demand talks
Crowd
cheers
blood y
girl
Trooper’s had enough of cop’s life
BALTIMORE (UPI) — A veteran cop is bring
put out to pasture early. The noise erf the traffic,
especially trucks, is too tough on his nerves. And
he needs someone to take care of him.
Trooper, a 12-year-old black seldinR, ' wa.s
taken off the streets after four years of working as
Officer diaries Elsler's partner. Now he’s waiting
for new ‘'parents" to claim him.
"The vet recommended we get him away from
trucks and traffic,” said Sgt. TTiomas Whalen, who
has watched over 18 four-legged coi» for 32 yeaia.
"He’s too nervous to take into traffic.
“Maybe he just finally figured 'this isn’t for me’
and was ready to retire," Whalen said, walking by
the stalls, calling each horse by name.
"It could be another cou|da of years before we
retire another horse,” Whalen said. “It just doesn’t
happen all the time. But you know ttot ^ day
you will have to retire them. Everyone has to retire
sometime — that's life.
"There’s a lot of sentiment whap a horse is
retired but we know he’ll have a flood home,” he
said.
"He's a nice horse,” Whalen said, adding
Trooper will be a “good family horse. He'll make'a
good trail horse for somebody who will treat him
right.”
Troopei 's new owners will Ije interviewed and
before he leaves the police department his new
home will be checked. Whalen is proud of his
horses, which are carefully, selected, then their
adjustment to police work is judged during a 30-day
probation period.
"He was just pei'feet when he went through it,”
Whalen said of 'Trooper, a saddle horse who was
purchased from a Baltimore County resident. “He
did just swell.”
"We look for stock saddle horses,” he said.
“There are no thoroughbreds here. They’re just too
nervous. We also only get geldings and look for bays
or chestnuts — you know, so they look uniform.”
Trooper was the only black gelding. He has a
blaze face and white socks on his back feet.
For Elsler, after saddling Trooper for four years,
there will be adjustments.
“Elach officer has his own mount,” Whalen said.
"They get used to the horse and know their habits.
The horse is their partner.”
/
A strongly-worded state¬
ment issued after the meeting
rejected the white-minority
government’s policy of
apartheid and demanded the
release of scores of detained
black nationalists.
The group also rejected the
government's contention that
black power ideology import¬
ed from the United States was
the cause of recent distur¬
bances in South Africa.
"We meet together in re¬
sponse to the continuing cry
ck, deep frustration and de¬
spair of our people throi^hout
the republic which has man¬
ifested itseK since June 16."
Hudm Ntsanwisi. chief min¬
ister of the Ga^ankulu tribal
homeland, said.
June 16 was when riots
broke out in the blacks-only
township of Soweto near Jo¬
hannesburg. Official casualty
lists show at least 7S2 persons
—all but three of them blacks
—have died since the riots
began , and spread to black
towns around South Erica’s
major cities.
The initial grievance was
the enforced use of the Dutch-
based Afrikaans language in
schools. LAter demonstrations
have attacked other ^ymbois
of white dominance in South
Africa where four million
whites exert contiol over 18
million blacks.
The government hast backed
down on the Afrikaans rule,
saying students may choose
between Afrikaans or English.
Blacks consider Afrikaans a
symbol of white rule and also-
argue that English is more
practical.
Disturbances were reported
Saturday near Cape Town.
Port Elizabeth and Alice. In
one incident, a group 20
blacks beat a white man and
wrecked his car at 3 a.m. on
a road outside Johannesburg.
Police Minister James
Kruger has said that commu¬
nist ideology, which sparked
disorders in the early 1960s.
was being replaced by black
power ideiriogy imported from
the United States.
“It Is more romantic — a
sort of black Nazism,"
Kruger said.
He said the disorders were
ending, at least partly be¬
cause many black nationalist
leaders have been jailed
under laws that allow indefi¬
nite detention without trial.
Chief Catsha Buthelezi.
leader of the country’s four
million Zulus, said: "The
unrest wouldn't have gone to
such lengths if the soli wasn't
fertile in the first place."
Meanwhile, the black tribal
leaders demanded that the
Bantu African administration
boards that administer the
townships be scrapped.
They also repeated that
they "have no intention what¬
soever of opting for so-called
'independence* as we do not
want to abdicate our birth¬
right as South Africans, as
well as forfeiting our share
of the economj^ and wealth
which vfe have jointly built.”
Under new government poli¬
cy. the nine tribal homelan^ls
or Bantustans. ciMnprising 13*
per cent of the country’s land
area, are to become Indepen¬
dent All blacks are to be citi¬
zens of the homelands rather
than of South Africa.
Inside
Cargo blocks
firefighers
—Page 3
Bennett explains
B.C.’s position
—^Page 6
Speed up work
MPs asked
—^Page 9
Banks fighting
daily-interest bill
—Page 12
Pressure hurting
Victoria shows
—Record Week, 36
Background
Page
8
Bridge
89
'IKe Botcher
M
Checkmate
38
Oasalfied
37-M
Coltectlbles
M
('emirs
34
Croseword
49
Fjditorials
4
Rntertalnmeiit
33
F'amlly S7-M,
SS. 83
Flnaace
M-!4
Names In the News
•
Oatiloors
37
SUm Gourmet
99
Kports 16* 18-*t
Stamp Packet
38
Television
88
Travel •
84, SS
Week In ReconU
88
HARTFORD, Com. (UPI)
— A 16-ye»r-old girl. «p-
parently high on LSD. slash^
her wrists and arms and then
rubied to the steps of a
Roman Catholic church pee¬
ing a razor to her throat while
a crowd of 300 persons
cheered and screamed, "do
your thing, sister!"
"Anything tiiat she did that
lotted like it was going to
draw blood, they cheered."
said police detective William
Tremont.
The girl, not identified be¬
cause she is e minor, was hit
by a whisky bottle during
t^ 45 minutes she held back
police, priests and friends by
threatening to cut her throat.
She finally collapsed on the
steps of Inimaculate Concep¬
tion church because she lost
so much blood, ^e was treat¬
ed at a Hartford hospital and
released.
Police called the crowd's
cheering "disgusting."
"The guys (police at the
scene) told me they were just
like animals." Tremont said.
"They were yelling, ‘do it.
meter! "Do your thing, sister!’
"right on!’ " the officers told
the detective.
"It was like they were
witnessing a spectacle at a
football game." Tremont said.
Friends of the girl told re¬
porters she bad taken LSD.
Cootioued OB Pag^ ^
Water down the U.K. drain
LONDON (UPI) — British
red tape Saturday held up
Londmi's water saving plans,
dooming 40 million gallons to
go down the drain every day.
Officials locked the gates of
public forests in seven En¬
glish counties in hopes of halt¬
ing a rash of fires triggered
by Britain's worst droui^t in
250 years.
Welsh w^er authorities edr-
culated bright red posters
warning, "it's running out."
and prepared to shut off
water to 1 millicm people’s
homes for 17 hours in every
24.
Forestry commission orders
closing forests and woodlands
in the hardest hit areas did
not come soon enough for
some exhausted Are depart¬
ments.
"We'are stretched to the
limit," said Ray Orringe, a
fire officer in South Wales.
"We are fighting a war with¬
out wartime cxganization.
"In normal times we get 10
to 20 calls a day. In the past
few' weeks we have been get¬
ting up to UO a day.
"Some part-time firemen
ha\’e not slept for 48 hours
because they go straight from
(heir usual job« to fighting
fires. Dne man hasn’t slept in
72 hours.”
Belgian authorities Satur¬
day began enforcing regula¬
tions w’hich could toss a man
into Jail for washing his car.
An emergency decree im¬
poses fines of up to 31 ntiilion
and jail terms up to five
years for wasting water. The
minimum fine is 3100 and the
minimum Jail term one
nKMith.
Only one British area so fag-
imposes fines for illegal water
use. though all nine water dis¬
tricts have applied for that
authority. The Thames area
application, covering Greater
London, stalled on tape.
Its public notices eight days
ago of pending restrictions
failed to comply with some
provisions of the emergency
law passed by parliament last
month. With 40 million gallons
a day pouring down the.drain
until the re8tricti<Mi8 come
into force, authorities said it
would take until September to
unsnarl the mess.
In France, parched like
England by a summer^long
drought., a forest fire trapped
hundreds of vacationers on a
seaside beach near Royan.
With the Are cutting coastal
roads, a Dunkirk-like armada
of small boats rescued the va¬
cationers from the beach.
Red tape delays saving plan
What’s up, doc?
There are all sorts of strange looking two-legged
animals which wander around zoos, often pointing
square things into one’s, face. Curiosity got the
better -of this giraffe at African Lion Safari Park
at Rockton, Ont, who decided to get bettw lode at
one of the boxes held by biped visitor. Distortion
effect is produced by use of wide-angle lens.
JOHANNESBURG (AP) —
Moderate black tribal leaders
Saturday demanded a meet¬
ing with Prime Minister John
Vorster to find solutions to
grievances that have led to
riots in black urban areas.
Leaders from seven of
South Africa’s nine tribal
homelands met for eight
hours at a Johannesburg air¬
port hotel, one of the few in¬
tegrated hotels in the countr>-.
Only the Transkei homeland
and the Swazi reserve, newest
and smallest of ,the tribal
areas, were not represented
at the meeting.
Suspects sought
in school blaze.
By RAY KERR
IstanS Itfitflr
CAMPBELL RIVER — A 33
million fire which destroyed
Campbell River junior high
Hcbool early Saturday morn¬
ing was almost certidnly the
work of arsonists.
Campbell River RCMP eeid
Saturday they had three sus¬
pects Aey were trying to
track dowp. although no one
was in custody.
RCMP said the intrudor
alarm was tripped about 10:30
p.m. Friday, vAth a sodes of
small fires believed set simul¬
taneously around the building.
'rwt> cruisers were dis¬
patched to the school and the
main fire was first discovered
in the gymnasium.
Only an adjoining library
and workshop were left stand¬
ing after the local fire depart¬
ment. a contingent from Cour¬
tenay and B.C. Forest Service
personnel had fought the
blaze all night.
There were no injuries re¬
ported and the school, built In
1951, was insured for 33.X mU*
lion.
According to Catfnpbell
River school board officials,
970 pu^ls were expected in a
little more than two weeks to
enixrf St the junior high.
Early Indications were tttey
would be distributed through
Campbell Rher senior high
settior high school and other
elementary schools.
However, more definite ar¬
rangements will probably be
made at a school board emer¬
gency meeting to be held
early this week.
The destroyed complex was
the major .junior high school
in the area. The only other
junior high is at Willow Point.
B.C. protest
growing
‘^effectively’
* By DON COLUN8
o C«l«nM KflSWt W
**What the federal government and Its Aoti-InflstloB
Board are <Mog by ripping up hnndreda of contracts
bargained in good faith by emi^yoea and employeis la
terribly deetractive to the fibre of democracy."
(Lynn WUUama, OamuUan leader of the United Steel¬
workers of America).
That was earlier last week. By Friday. Canadian
Labor Congress secretary Donald Montgmery was
leaving the philosophical views to people like Williams
and was zeroing in on specific "injustices" with a ven¬
geance.
"This bizarre and unprincipled act makes nonsense
of the government’s pretentions that the decisions
under the. wage control progrsim will bear any rela¬
tionship to principles of ^rness and justice.''
The obj^t of Montgomery’s attack was federal an¬
ti-inflation program adntinistrator Donald Tansley who
ordered a dramatic rollback to two sets of wage in-
<-reases already reduced by ttie Anti-Inflation Board it¬
self.
Tansley cut the increases of two groups of New¬
foundland mechaiics and auto body men to eight per
vent from the 19.6 and 25.5 per cent levels recommend¬
ed by the AIB.
To Montgomery it was an "act of unparaJlelled vin-
dictiveness" which simply showed that the government
wtaild do anything "to frustrate and destroy the process
of free collective bargaining lin this country."
Similar outcries are being heaid in B.C. these days
as organized labor acroes the country looks for some
uniformity in the might it hopes to bring to bear on the
lederal government in less than two months.
It is a matter of rallying the tr oops for labor’s big
day — the National Day ot Protest it has scheduled tor
Oct 14, the first araiiversary of the wage and price con¬
trol pre^p'am.
"I think it is developing pretty effectively, particu-
lariy In British Cfoluntbia," B.C. Federation of- Labor
secretary Len Guy told the Clolonist
To ensure #iat the day of protest is well orchestrat¬
ed (there is careful avoidance ot the term "general
strike") labor is already getting its acts together
across the country.
The B.C. federation has announced plans tor a
special meeting Aug. 30 that would bring tmder one roof
all the staff r^iresmtatives and officers of the unions
within the federation fold.
The idea is to "finalize plans" for what the federa¬
tion !at>elR the "Oct. 14 work stoppage."
t
★ ★ flife
Streamline laws proposed
Speed up work
MPs asked
COt0ni0t Victom. B.C., Sunday, August 22, 1976
/
She’s 105 today
\'ietoria resident sdnce 1900, Bridget Mai-y Morry
will celebrate her 105th birthday today with family
and friends. Born anjJ-inaTried in Newfoundland,
Mrs. Morry has beetr aidowed for about 40 years.
Alert and a keen listener to newscasts, she is among
oldest members of Women of Moose. She had 10
children, five of whom are still living.
Names in the News
By DOi a SMALL
OTTAWA fCP) — MP* will
likely be asked to approve a
new set of rules to speed up
the operation of Parliament
this autumn as well as ways
of improving their chances of
putting private bills into law.
The house pommlttee on
procedure and organization
will attempt to a consensus
tor such changes during meet¬
ings Sept. 20-23, ending a two-
year effort to reform parlia¬
mentary rules. The Commons
resumes Oct. 12.
The Idea behind proposed
reform is to more efficiently
organize the use of time in the
Commons and its committees.
All parties favor at least
some reform but officials say
it will be difficult to come up
with a package acceptable to
everyMie.
Still, they are optimistic
some progress will ^ made
and the Government House
leader. Mitchell Sharp, says
he e7q)ect8 the committee will
have a report for the Com¬
mons this toll.
Sub-committees have al-
Meg turns 46 alone,
hut she *s used to that
IX)NDON — PriDcesH Mar¬
garet celebrated her 46th
birthday on her owti Saturday
as she usually did even
before the break(kAvn of her
marriage to the Eari of .Snow¬
den. The difference this year
wa.s that friends did not have
to make excuses for them.
In the years of bickering
that preceded the legal sepa¬
ration of the couple last
Maroh. friends were always
advancing reasons why he
was one place and she an¬
other whenever there was
something hazily married
coufiles would have wanted to
observe together.
The expectation now is that
there will be a divorce after
two years of seftaration. the
legal mimmum for a plea of
irrevocable breakdown of
marriage.
□
FORT lAUDERDALE. Fla.
(UPI) — .Soola -Jacobs Linder,
mother of two children, faces
the electric chair for her con¬
viction in the murders rrf a
Florida highway patrolman
and a Canadian constable.
If Mrs. Linder’s death sen¬
tence is carried out, she
wt)uld become the first
woman ever executed in
Florida,. A number ot other
women have been sentenced
to die but all sentences have
been commuted. Her sentence
will be automatically ap¬
pealed.
"She took it better than I
did." said Judge Daniel Futch
' after sentencing.
□
TOKYO Japanese Deputy
Prime Minister Taken Fiikuda
Saturday urged I^me Min¬
ister Taken Mild to resign as
the arrest of former transpor¬
tation minister Tomlaaburo
Sonin Linder
... took sentenro well
llashimnto, 75. swelled to
three the number of leaders
of the ruling Liberal party
charged with accepting bribes
in the Lockheed affair.
□
NEW YORK — British
actor Richard Burton and
model Susan Hunt were mar¬
ried in Arlington, Virginia.
Saturday and flew here tor a
reception at the hotel where
they will live while he makes
a new film. The bride is the
former wife of British racing
driver James Hunt.
□
SPRINGFIELD. III. - A 67-
year-old Skokie. 111., woman
who said she was ".just en.ioy-
ing everybody going up and
getting their money." won i
$1,001,776 in 4 state lottery. "I |
iust can't t^ll you. I’m .fust so '
shak>'." said Nettle Abbink. |
after her name was drawn. "I i
have always been good' to ev¬
erybody else, so I hoped I
wYHild get repaid. I guess I
did."
□
LOS ANGELES Danny
Harwood Mitchell, 32, has
been charged with stealing
$20,000 worth art ob.jects
from three cemeteries. Funer¬
al ums. jewelry, coins, stat¬
ues and other art objects
were stolen from Forest
Lawn, Glendale and Cypress
and Hollywood memorial
parks;
□
DETROIT — A ballad about
the sinking of the ore carrier
Edmund Fitzgerald with 29
crew in Lake Superior last
November 10 has become a
best-seller, amazing even Ca¬
nadian singer Gordon IJght-
foot who wrote the words and
musfe.
ready drafted a number of
reform proposals. One by Lib¬
eral MP John Reid tKenora-
Rainy River) would do away
with the government’s right to
decide when Parliament
meets, recesses and rises.
Instead, he proposes a regu¬
lar Commwis work schedule
that would reduce the average
number of sitting days to
from about ISO a year. Every
sixth week the Commons
would recess, giving the MPs
a chance to cultivate their
constituencies or devote extra
time to committees. And ev-
eryOTe would have two
months off in the summer.
The reduction would proba¬
bly have the effect of fwxilng
the government to organize
its legislative programs more
carefully and it would give
MPs a better chance to plan
their own time.
Tt would also require
shorter debates. Reid
suggests that Commons
speeches — now 40 minutes in
most cases be reduced to
20 minutes. He also proposes
a major change in a con¬
troversial rule that allows de¬
bate on legislation to be cut
short — sto-called closure.
Reid’s sub-committee
suggests that any MP should
be given the chance to rise at
any time during debate and
ask for a vote on legislation
before the House. Currently,
it takes at least three days to
cut off debate as each of the
parliamentary stage bills
must pass before becoming
law. Additionally, it takes
three days to cut off debate
on any amendment introduced
at report stage, just before
final passage.
Government officials say it
is highly unlikely the proce¬
dure committee will agree to
the proposal, largely because
it is heavily weight^ in favor
of the government. It would
allow any majority (govern¬
ment a chance to force legis¬
lation through the House far
more quickly than under
present rules, and is expected
to be sharply opposed by long¬
time parliamentarians on the
committee.
There will likely be more
agreement on suggestions
from another sub-commltteg
led by Conservative MP
Marcel Lambert (Edmonton
West) — aimed at making
Commons committees more
' effective.
Currently, there are . 26
standing committees, five of
which include members of the
.Senate. Special committee.s
are set up from time to time
to deal with specific issues.
Some MPs are assigned to
three or four different com¬
mittees wd are constantly
being shuffled from one to an¬
other.
I.ambert's group proposes a
new three-ievel system which
would include a general ex¬
penditures committee with
power to form subcommittees
and investigate spending pro¬
grams without (tommons ajv
proval.
His group also suggests re¬
ducing the number of commit¬
tees to 16 and cutting mem¬
bership to 14 from the current
average of 20 MP?.
And it proposes an end to
the practice of selecting com¬
mittee chairmen from the
ranks of strictly government
members.
Instead, chairmen would be
designated by the Commons
Speyer to various commit¬
tees and picked from a quali¬
fied panel of MPs from gov¬
ernment and Opr>ositiOT.’
The I..ambeii subcommittee
also suggests the formation of
a committee that would deal
with n<xi-controversial hills al
second reading, assuming
work now undertaken by the
Commons. This move would
•free the Commons (o spend
more time on ma jor bills or in
general policy debate.
Finally, a third .sulnrommil-
tee led by Liberal Gus Mac-
Farlane (Hamilton Mountain)
plans to propose steps that
would allow more bills spon¬
sored by private MPs to ccane
to a vote.
Most private members' bills
are discussed during the few
hours set aside each week tor
such debate, then are put at
the bottom of a long list for
furdier debate without being
voted on.
Arts course
Death plant
to close
MILAN. Italy (Reuter) —
The SwUs-ewned Icmeea
chemical factory at Seveeo,
where valve blowout spread a
cloud of iiolson last month,
wUJ be closed permanently,
Italian officials say.
The decision was taken by
regional authorities and trade
union officials representing
the no employees at the fa**-
tory, 15 miles north of here.
What do children
think about
elder generation?
(AP)
What do children
know about the elderly?
• "They have heart at¬
tacks at 90 and die."
• "They go to church a
B.C. Rail union
pressing award
VANCOUVER (CP) — Rep¬
resentatives of five B.C. Rail¬
way unions vdll meet With
railway management Wednes¬
day to convince BCR to join
an appeal against an" Anti-
Inflaticm Board rollback of the
BCR contract.
Bill Ferguson, general
chairman of the Canadian
Union of Transportation Em¬
ployees, said the Unions have
decided to withhold job action
Stolen paintings
value $.'>50,000
LONDON (UPI) — Thieves
broke into a conunerical art
gallery and stole 10 paintings
valued al $.550,000, T»lice
said. The most valuable
was a painting of a brown
and white Wng Charles
spaniel by George Stubbs, the
greatest English animal
painter at the ISth century. It
wras priced at about $245,000.
until the appeal is ccmcludcd.
"Operations are normal and
we have assured the railway
that they will ccxitinue to be
normal," he said.
The unibn served 72-hour
strike notice two weeks ago in
response to the board rollback
of the settlement negotiated
with the railway in January.
The workers had a first-
year increase of 16.09 per c«it
reduced to lO.jBS per cent and
a second-year int;rease of
10.79 per cent cut back to 8.03
per cent, with neither in¬
creased to exceed $2,400 in
each year.
Ferguson said at the time
that the union had legal ad¬
vice that it no longer had a
legal or funding contract with
(he railway because there was
no provision in the contract
for board approval.
However, he said the union
met later with the railway
and agreed to hold the strike
threat in abeyance pending
the outcome of appeal.
• "They have to have
canes."
• "They talk funny.”
Those replies from childien
are quoted in a new study
that reports children know lit¬
tle about elderly people and
dislike the idea of growing old
themselves.
The study, covering 180
Maryland children aged three
to II, was financed by the
American Association <n Re¬
tired Persons and the Na¬
tional Retired Teachers Asso¬
ciation. It was (xmducted by
two childhood specialists from
the University of Maryland.
Richard Jantz and Carol See-
feldt.
Asked what they feel about
growing old, many of the chil¬
dren gave such answers as.
"My face will feel crinkled,
my eyes will feel blurry": or
"Sad. because I’ll be dying
soon, and I won’t have the fun
and joy I had when I was lit¬
tle."
A few said they would (eel
"kinda happy," or Til still
probably feel like me."
While the children de¬
scribed elderly people as sick
sad. ugly and bad, they said
also that the elderly are won¬
derful, rich and friendly.*
The report suggests that
schools might introduce chil¬
dren to a ^versity of elderly
people so the children can
understand that the elderly
enjoy a wide variety of activi¬
ties like swimming, tennis,
music and art
EATON'S'
on cable
VANCOUVER (CP) — Stu¬
dents in parts at B.C. will be
able to take the province’s
first television university
credit course this fall.
TTie University of British
Columbia will begin the
course. Fine Arts 125 — Pyra¬
mids to Picasso, Sept. 27 for
cabievision subscribers in
Vancouver, nearby Richmond,
and Vemcm in the Okanagan.
Tito course consists of 45
half-bour telecasts, a course
manual and two textbooks. It
will include a telephone mes¬
sage service so students can
ask the instructor questions.
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Biology textbooks
branded as sexist
AUSTIN. Tex. (UPI) —
Women have complained that
biology books proqvi.sed for
Texa.s public sdioois are so
sexist that one itses a male
figure for a drawing depicting
female ovaries;
"This i.s a very confusing
picture," said Berlyn Bock, a
member of the National Orga¬
nization of Women a(>pearing
before the state textbrok com¬
mittee. "It might very well be
a picture of a transvestite."
Ms. Bock urged the commit¬
tee to demand the publisher
use more representations of
women, especially in draw¬
ings depicting the female re¬
production system.
She was one of more than
100 women and men who re¬
viewed proposed texts and
submitted critiques to the
textbook committee.
The le.xtbook committee
will vote on te.xts to be used
in public scho»)l classrooms
and will spend more than
$32.1 million on the books
adopted.
Marjorie Randal, a Hear
I.ake City anthropologist,
urged the committee to reject
tieology: The Paradox of
Earth and Man.
"This is a Jjjgblae^vexjst,
male chauvinjjpbook.X she
.said. "If male dominance
were deeply entrenched in the
human biogram, it would not
need so many cultural props
and defem-es."
She said the bO)k clasaified
women as baby machines and
argued that male dominance
was an inherited trait in pri¬
mates. %
Rema liOU Brown, a former
.school teacher who now man-
age.s the Houston area Fe¬
minist Federal Credit Union,
protested what she termed
se.xist presentations of women
in the Ginn Intermediate Dic¬
tionary.
"While the male pictures
run the gamut from tractor
driver to lunar module engi¬
neer. the female roles are the
traditiorKil, trite stereotypes;
modeling clothes, for exam¬
ple. sunbonnet, .sari, kimino,
lace headband, etc. to cheer¬
leaders, drum majors and
.switchboard operators," she
.said.
"I do not protest the presen¬
tation of wt)men in the roles '
of wife, homemaker or
mother. Rather I proto.st that
this is not the only role of
women today." Ms. Brown
said. "Most married women
are employed outside of the \
home ami llie number is in- I
creasing." |
262U GOVERNMENT STREET at Hilltida Avanut • 385-6737 • dir. ik;.00740A
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s
Englishman River development depends on province
C«lefll«t CorrMpondtnt
The Regional District of
Nanaimo has confirmed its
position that if the provincial
govej-nment agrees to a land
sMap. ttie district will conMd>
er relaxing its subdivision re-
quiiH?m«nt8 to allow a five-
acre-kit subdivision in the
Khic Tree Farm.
The move followed further
correspondence between the
regional board and Allton
Land Corp, Ltd., the owner of
a 1,200-acre parcel along the
Englishman River, in which
All ton president Andrew
McGregor warned the region¬
al board that foreclosure on
the property is imminent, and
that the mortgage holder
would probably alienate its
side of the river from public
use if it assumed possession.
McGregor has told the re-
gi<mal board in previous
meetings that two options are
open for devek^m«it of the
parcel, which is known locally
as the Kirk Tree Farm.
The highways department
has insisted that land along
the l^itglishman River and
Morlson Creek amounting to
about 320 acres cannot be sub¬
divided, because of possible
damage to the river. But it
has given AUton permission to
subdivide the balance of the
property into 12-acre lots.
If the envirmment and land
use committee agrees to re¬
imburse the developer for the
loss of the riverfront land, by
giving him land elsewhere,
and if the regional district
agrees to r^ax its 12-acre
minimum lot size requirement
in the area to permit five-acre
lots, an Allton Corp. lawyer
told the regicmal district in
May that it would deed tlw
320 acrea to the crown, the
regional district, or some
other pid>lic body, for public
use.
If the land swap falls
through, and the regional dis¬
trict does not allow the five-
acre-lot subdivision, however,
the 320 acres will be main¬
tained as private property,
and since the property line
runs to the middle ^ the
river, public access to the
river will in fact be denied for
most ot its length.
This second option is the di¬
rection in which the mortgage
holder ^vould develop the
prop«^ H it forecloses,
McGregCM* told the regional
district in recent corre¬
spondence.
In an effort to head off
alienation of the riverfront
properiy. the regional board
considered a resolution that
';if the environment and land
use committee of the Prov¬
ince of British Columbia ap¬
proves an exchange of lend
for certain properties bordeiv
ing the Enj^lshman River, the
board would be prepared to
consider relaxation erf the re¬
quirements erf the subdivision
bylaw for the Coombs-
Ililllers-Erringtem planning
area.”
Regional board chairman
Paul Smldi seid the threat of
foreclosure "could be a bluff,
but I don’t think so..
The developer has been at¬
tempting to get a subdivision
on the property for more than
five yws, he noted, and
could be reaching the end erf
his patience on the matter.
"IX we can help to protect the
puMic interest In this in any
way*, we should do ao."
Smith's thoughts on the
matter were not shared by
Extension director Scotty
Sutherland, who said: "I get
the feeling that there’s a little
Irft of 'blackmail' going on
here." The developer could be
using the regional district as
a lever to si^^port his. claim
for a land exchange, Suther¬
land said. Nevertheless, Suth¬
erland voted with the motion.
Opposing the motion were
directors Earl Ware, who said
a public meeting should be
called first, and Olav Saele,
who said after the meeting
that he was concerned that
the regional district was mak¬
ing a special deed with the de¬
veloper.
The resoluticsi is almost
identical in intent to a resolu¬
tion presented to the board in
June. TTvat motion was tabled
pending a decisicxi from the
provincial government on a
land ^-ap, but so far all the
regional district has heard
from Environment Minister
James Nielsen is that the
question of a land swap may
he brought before the environ¬
ment and land use committee
by the minister (rf highways.
In spite of no encourage¬
ment ^m other members of
the regional board, Director
Ware has gone ahead and
called a public meeting on the
issue on his own. That meet¬
ing is scheduled for Monday
in the Parksville Oommunitj'
Hall, beginning at 7:30. Wai'e
has asked for both oral and
written submissions from
members of the public.
Malaspinti exposition centre
gets all-important financing
NANAIMO » The National
Exposition Centre, planned
for the Malasplna College
campus has become a reality
with an announcement from
Victoria.
Exposition centre project
chairman John Otametsld
said word was recehed from
Victoria that the centre has
been awarded a grant of
ISt.ISS from the pro>tnclal
community recreation facili¬
ties fund.
The effect of the grant is to
complete financing of the
project. The NaHonal Muse¬
um of Canada had earlier
contributed fl25.000 to the
project and nearly was
collected from the citizens of
Nanaimo and district in a
blitz campaign lust January.
( hametski sold that with fl-
uuncing complete, he expects
construction can start within
the next few months. The
centre will proride exhibits of
varying nature for the en¬
joyment of the entire commu¬
nity.
N-plant
on
Island
‘still premature’
Adventure, training
combined at Quadra
by BILL SAflTH
colonist Kt po rtwr
A man closely connected
with the Outward Bound
training school program in
the Ignited Kingdom, Briga¬
dier John Manchand. was in
Comox last week assessing
the adventure training pro¬
gram In (^ration there.
The distinguished British
visitor, on a Ihrec-month tour
of Canadian and American
armed forces camps, had high
praise for the adventure and
training prt^ram being of¬
fered cadets at the dry-land
naval base poking into Comox
Bay.
HMCS QUADRA on Goose
Spit is home for sea cadets
from ail across Canada — and
from all over the world —
each summer.
The brigadier was extreme¬
ly pleased with wliat he .sow'
earlier last Nveek and was full
cf Tiraise lor the dedication
.shown by the staff.
"There is no doubt in my
mind the staff is doing a great
job for youth of the \vt)rld,’’
lie saitl. "They are producing
lijNt-cla.ss citizens and leadci's
in all w7iIKs of lite."
(ONNECIED WITH Out¬
ward Bound courses at an
anne<l torcc.s school in Wales,
Marchand said the pirogram
at Comox Ls very .similar in
many asi>ects to the national
ly known survival training
and leadership program.
"The course at Qiuidra is
helping to develop well-round¬
ed personality in -the young
cadets," he said, adding, "it's
par exc.ellanoe as far a.s I am
concerned.”
Before going to Comax, he
watched the cadets perform
the colorful Ceremony' of the
Flags in Victoria and heard
the Quadra band in concert at
Beacon Hill paric.
MARTHAND. INVOIA ED
in establishment eight years
ago of a Canadian Outward
Bound school at Keremeos.
found standard of fitness at
Quadra very high.
There is. he said, con.slder-
abie evidence that young peo¬
ple are becoming aware of
the need fix* an active outdoor
program.
An Indication of this re¬
newed interest in the "wx)n-
derful heritage of the natural
environment” can. he .said. l.e
gaugetl from the prescni
boom in Txackpai’king in liotli
•■ountries.
THE (OL'RvSE AT Quadra
is divided into two parts ac¬
cording to age and experi¬
ence. Younger cadets, 14-15
>*eai'g, participate in a two-
week general course whioli !u-
miliai^es them with proce¬
dures and facilities of the
camp.
They are taught liow to 'rur-
vlve in the outdoors, learn all
about sailing and tackle the
tough obstacle t'.ourso. now
called n confidence (^rso.
Second phase of instruction
is more S|>eciali2cd and is
0 |>cn to boys and girls who
have passed through the two-
week general cdurse.
CADEre TAKINti the two-
month long trade courses and
those who enrol in the band
courses, all undertake some
minor Outward Bound-type
activities.
The practical leadership
wHtrse, for 16-yeair-old«, is for
those cadets who, in previous
years, have contpleted the
trades and junior courses.
There are now' 100 cadets
taking the leadership ccurse,
a cotirse which includes a solo
cxfiedltion.
TIII.S MEANS s|>endmg 2Va
(lays alone in "wild” «-o\iniry
with lillle or no Irxid.
By CRAIG MEREDITH
CsiMist CsrrMponStRt
DUNCAN — Former chair¬
men of B.C. Hydro have op-
ixjslng views on whether Brit¬
ish Columbia needs nuclear
energy' now or sometime in
the future.
Speaking to the annual
meeting of the B.C. Institute
of Fire Engineers here on the
wericend. Dr. Hugh Keenley-
side said he did not agree
with the views expressed by
Gordon Shnim in hie Aug. 17
letter in The Daily Colonist
proposing a nuclear power
plant on Vancouver Island.
"If there is one province In
Canada, which does not need
nuclear energy with all its
problems, it is British Colum¬
bia with an abundant supply
of natural resources.
"Nuclear energy is danger¬
ous, expensive and unreliable
and we don't need it here ,..
I plan to reply to Shrum’s let¬
ter in the next few days,”
said Keenleystde, who was at
Dangerous crossing
Trustees drop
adult guards
You gotta ktunv the roi>es around here
"This is a contemplative
period — a lime when the
young man or woman cun fast
and can spend time meditat¬
ing on their past and future
life," Marchand said.
Another Outward Bound on*
pedllion which the cadets are
required to complete sees
them left in grouiis of eight or
10 in cutlers in Georgia Strait.
HITH MSRY I^ITTLE food,
they are required to be away
from camp for tour days.
They must call at four bays to
obtain fresh water and collect
what edibles they can.
The program, which comes
. near the end of the eight-week
course, is one of the high-
lighu and. accordinrt.to Mar¬
chand. a gi-ent character-
builder.
NANALMO — The concept
of adult crossing guards at
strategic dangerous higjw'ay
or railway crossings in Nanai¬
mo school district has been
dropped.
TTie Nanaimo schoed district
made the decision at a recent
meeting, following t^cussion
of the ramifications of the
program.
The program is funded com¬
pletely by the provincial gov¬
ernment but, In an interview
later, board chairman Joe
KUner explained why the plan
was drc^iped.
He said that once the board
declares a crossing dangerous
and places a guard there dur¬
ing critical periods when stu¬
dents are going to or from
school, the board becomes
completely responsible for the
crossing, whether the guaid is
present or not.
"We have decided that
since our job is primarily edu¬
cation and tile highways de-
partmwt are responsible for
the highways, It would be bel¬
ter for all concerned if we
dropped the laograjn," the
boaid chairman said.
The board had undertaken
the program in parts of the
district last year but adult
guards will not be present at
any crossings under school
board funding \vhen school
begins in the Nanaimo district
Sept. 7.
Vancouver Island Lions
It’s a world of real sharing
Leffler in hi* element with Lions Club pin*
Colonist Corrospondtnl
Tlie world of Lionlsm.
It's a special world, says
Qiff Leffler. a Parksville ac-
countant who recently
finished a year as district
governor for Vancouver Is¬
land and the northern Olym¬
pic Peninsula in Washington
state.
It's a world where people in
the community get together
and raise mcmey for worthy
causes both in theh* own oom-
munitles and around the
world. It's a world where the
needs ot children and the han¬
dicapped and the aged are
met.
In the past year, Leffler has
visited all 47 clubs in District
13-1, which has a total mem¬
bership of about 1,€00. This
membership is only a tiny
portion of the nearly-30,000
Lions clubs in 149 countries
around the world, but their
impact locally is by no means
tiny.
Can a price tag be put on
the smile tlint comes across
the face of a child living in a
remote lumber camp on the
uest coast of the Island, as
she acce))ts a gift from a
.Santa Claus who literally fliej^
through the air?
11 happens every year,
w hen one of the i lubs in the
district, the Tahsis club, flies
a Santa up the coast, bringing
gifts to children in the remote
villages and camps.
In Port McNeiU, local Lions
raised a whoi^lng 353,000 as
their contribution to a com¬
munity swimming pool.
The Port Alice club billeted
Rumble Beach residents and
sei*ved some 3.500 free meals
when mud slides came down
on the area.
The list goes on. Some clubs
haie big projects, some
smaller, but the main feeling
he got from his view of the
district in his term as gov’er-
nor. 'Said Leffler. is "the
many wonderful things that
Lions are doing in.our com¬
munities.”
In Honedulu iA June. Leffler
handed over his title to Jerry
Metcalfe of Mayne Island, the
new' district governor.
Now, says Leffler, ”I hope
to have more time to spend
with my own club In Parks¬
ville,” where he is treasurer
this year.
That Honolulu convention
w'as also the occasion for the
Port Albemi club to win the
Golden Pen award for the
best scrapbook in the world of
Lionlsm, and for the uni-
termed delegation from the
district to come in second in
the big parade.
one time co-chairman of 6.C.
I^'dro with Shnim.
Shrum said in a letter to the
editor that Vancouver Island
would be belter sen-ed by a
nuclear plant than the pro¬
posed B.C. Hydro 500.000-volt
transmission line from the
mainland, which involes a
new right-of-way being cut
from Qualicum to Victoria.
Earlier in Nanaimo, Trans¬
port Minister Jack Davis and
B.C. I^xiro chairman Robert
Bonner said nuclear pewer
will n<rf be considered as an
energy resource for the Island
in the next 10 years.
Davis, who is also the min¬
ister respaislble for energy,
said he considered the nuclear
fuel’s use inevitable, and that
the Island was the first likely
place to build a nuclear plant.
Said Bonner; "For the pur¬
pose erf the next decade in
planning (for the Island’s en¬
ergy needs), we will be using
conventional sources of elec¬
trical hydro and coal-thermal
methods. Nuclear power will
not be used in the next 30
years.”
Davis injected that the
province will develop coal,
hydro, oil and gas to supply
B.C.’8 en«^ requirements
for the next decade.
The topic of nuclear energy
came up at the Duncan meet¬
ing during a question period,
after Keenleyride spoke on
the main topic, which was his
controversi^ 1975 report on
firefighting services in B.C
The 149i)ag€ report, com¬
missioned by former attorney-
general Alex Macdonald, es¬
tablished tiiat British Colum¬
bia's fire record is the worst
of any province in Canada
and is above the United States
average.
After a sev'en-month inqui¬
ry. he listed 37 major recom¬
mendations for improving the
rtrefighting services in B.C.
Keenleyside told the fire en¬
gineers so far none of his
recommendations requiring
provincial legislation has
come before the Legislature,
but he was hoping tliere
would be some action during
the fall session.
"The previous government
did not have enough time to
act cm the recommendations,
and it’s natural that the
present government wants to
take a good look before insti¬
tuting them.” the author ot
the report said.
He added that in recent
brief discussions with a
number of cabinet ministers,
th^ have all indicated their
interests in the report.
"If these recommendations
are not taken to task. I will be
very disappointed and I w1jl
certainly become quite vocal
about it,” Keenleyside said to
the fire engineers, who gener¬
ally support his report to the
provincial government-
Confidence course at HMCS Quadra pu^ onus on yoiing cadets
->BIII Smittt Photos
peter
pollen
ford
^ laila (BoUnUA.
Section 2
Sunday, August 22, 1976
Page 11
TERRY SPENCE
Award winning news.
C-FAX 1070 NEWS
V
]2 SDail; Colaniot victoria. B.C., Sunday, Auguat 22. 1978
Was rusty reputation at fault?
Chrysler surges past Ford
Banks in reargua rd action
to stop daily-interest law
By Tlw Ctnaditn Prats
In the 1961 model year.
Chrysler Canada Ltd. has
such a tough time selling cars
that, in desperattor, it a)>-
pealed to civic pride.
Billboards, bumper stu-kert
and other literature appeared
in Windsor. Ont. where the
rompany is located, proclaim-
ing:
"Wbfit Oirysler builds —
builds Windsor." .
Now. 15 j-ears later and for
the first time since the
Depre.sslon 1930s. Chrysler
cars are outselling those of
Ford Motor Co. ol Canada
Ltd., perennial No. 2 car
maker in Canada.
Of ttie so<<aiied Big Four
auto makers. General Motors
of Canada Ltd., is atiU the
deader, with American Motors
(Canada) Ltd. a distant
fourth.
But the shift of the highly-
competitive maiicet bjjtween
Chrjsler and Ford has had
the industry buzzing since it
began more than a year ago.
Many reasons are given for
the switch but the two most
acknowledge are Tord’s deci¬
sion to emphasize fuel econ¬
omy at the expen.se of style
changes, and Chr>’sler's build¬
up of a strengthened dealer
nrganiz^ion that many de¬
scribe as unsurpa.saed in the
industry.
And then there’s the prob¬
lem of rust or. rather, the
way lust and Ford au¬
tomobiles have been connect¬
ed in the public mind.
In recent months. Ford has
been hurt by constimw groups
in Canada and the United
States who have launched
publioity and legal campaigns
suggesting Fords rust faster
and worse than other cars.
Roy Bennett, president of
Ford, said his firm has been
bi'anded the villain of the in¬
dustry without justification.
"Unquesticaiably. we have
had more of a problem on
some of our cars than on
some of the facing competi¬
tive models," he said. "At the
same time, there are other
cai*a where we have had less
of a problem. So, you can't
compute averages."
Meanwhile. slatisHcs show
Chr.vsler sales pulling ahead
of Ford at an accelerated
rate.
lr> July, Ford’s sales
Mote tcinners on Chrysler nssembly line
dropped by 16.5 per cent from
tlie previo( 4 S July to 15.776
units. Chrysler’a July sales,
meanwhile rose another 6.2
per cent to 18,841 cars.
For the first six months <rf
this year. Ford sold 95,965
cars, down 9.7 per cent from
the same 1975 period, while .
Chrysler sold 117,884 cars for
a gain of 13 per cent.
in the combined market.
Ford leads Chrysler by 156.721
vehicles to i44..552 units sold
in the first six months of this
year.
Chrysler's fortunes began to
change when the late Ron
Todgham took over as pres¬
ident. He used to run a dea¬
lership in Chatham. Ont. and
this experience gave him the
background he needed to re¬
vamp tlie company's dealer
network. Significantly, his
marketing specialist was C.
O. Syd Hurly, who succeeded
him 8s president last fall.
Chrysler’s product mix and
quickness to redesign cars
added impetus to the emerg¬
ing new network.
The olassy intermediate-size
CortkAa was one example, as
was the introduction last year
of the Volare and Aapen to
replace the aging Dart and
Valiant compacts.
Hurly recalls titat the firm
didn't panic when the industry
began to move heavily into
the small car field.
"There has been a great
deal written and said over the
past three or tour years about
the small car, the subcom-.,
pact," he said.
"Well, Chrysler didn't come
out w-ito a subcompact in the
years just gone by because
our evaluation of the maricet
showed there was a much
greater potential in the inter¬
mediates."
Bennett des<-nbes the .1976
model year as one of little
<^nge in styling or products
for Ford.
He said the compkny ron-
emtrated its energies on fuel
economy for small cars, a
step that was "well re¬
ceived."
"But we have not been as
competitive as we have in the
past In terms of having new
products to offer," he said.
"We were one or two years
out of {ihase with competi¬
tion.”
As well, he eald Ford cars
were priced a little higher,
adding "we probably went a
little further in trying to off-
•et our cost increases."
Bennett referred also to
vdkat he deecribed as the phe¬
nomenon of the switch by
many car buyers to trucks.
"We found an incredible !n-
creaee In the number of his-
tcHical car buyers who are
nesv buying pick-ups or vans."
This fall, Ford will be In¬
troducing some new or res¬
tyled intermediate small cars,
together with style changes on
other lines.
Next spring. Chrysler plans
to launch a new subcompact
which it says will come in
time tor an expected ahift to
the smaller car market.
Chrysler dealers are happy
about the new' trend.
Derak Simmonds, 46. man¬
ager ofSDodge Ontario. Ltd.,
of Torohto. re<’alled the
Chrysler took a nosedive in
the 1950s and 1960s.
‘Hut during that last few
years, we’ve put out a pretty
good fwoduct.” said Sim¬
monds, who has l)een selling
Chrysler products tor 14
years.
"I guess a lot of people
have just started to realize
it"
By TS* CaruiSlM erM«
In a few weeks, battle lines
will be,^awn over the issue
of how banks and other finan¬
cial institutions calculate in¬
terest rates an savings ac¬
counts.
A bill requiring that these
rates be calculated on a daily
basis as schooled to be in¬
troduced In Parliament this
fall as part of the new Bor¬
rowers and Lenders Protec¬
tion Act.
Most financial institutions
currently pay interest twice a
year, bas^ on the minimum
monthly balance.
Banking spokesmen say the
administrative cost of doing it
on a daily basis would be too
high. To break even, they
claim banks would have to
lower the rates on these ac¬
counts or increase service or
loan charges.
Rowland FYazee. president
of the Canadian Bankers’ As¬
sociation. said the public'
would be wise to consid^ the
cost of calculating daily inter¬
est as opposed to benefits.
. .1 hope there are better
ways of achieving the govern¬
ment's objectives."
Financial instituticxis that
pay daily interest on savings
accounts say the system is
not expensive.
Bill Caskenette. spokesman
for the Ontario Credit Union
League, said the league has
been encouraging members to
switch to the daily interest
policy. '
Wayne McKay, spokesman
for Vancouver City Savings,
the country’s largest credit
union, said his institution has
fotmd that calculating daily
interest "is really a very sim¬
ple adminsitrative exercise.
"The banks are making a
greaK deal of noise ab^t
something they don't want to
do." he said. “ ... If we can
do It at our size, certainly, the
banks, with their massive sys¬
tems cg|i do it."
A Toronto Star study in¬
dicated that Canada's banks
are paying less than half the
advertised interest rate on
many savings de|)Oflts.
'Ihe newspaper said this
was because of the way the
interest rate is calculated and
the fact that many people
withdraw money each month,
leaving a amalbr b«Uoce or
no balance at all..
Under the current system,
banks calculate intereat on
the lowest bllance during the
month. This means that a per¬
son who has $1,000 in an ac-
i^ount for 29 days of the month-,
but withdraws it on the 30th '
day. would get no interest.
With 'daily calculattcxi. in- '
terest is paid for every day *
the money is deposited.
A study by former UBC tat- 1
nomics professor David Bond ^
of the total amount of funds in *
sa\ings accounts and the total {•
interest banks paid for those >
funds found "overwhelming’'- -
evidence that l>anks were pay¬
ing less than half the adver-'
tis^ interest rate because of
the method used. '
UIIIIBIBIBMBIBBlIBBIIBIIBee
I BOOK NOW ...
I BtiuKU, RecepUnf.
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- from PmpIc
I STARDUST
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NIW $30,900
BTRATA DUPLBXIS
LANQBOflO 8 BIOROOMt
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(^it
tender
Serving Bm«h CoKmOS 9«nc0 1894
Assets m 0 XCO 0 S o( $800 miHion
5-year Debentures
M*n. amount- $500
Vancouver Trading Week
VANCOUVIR WeCKCY STOCK QUOTiS
OiitribulM by Th« Csnaflian Prtft
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Citiac Mini
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Cit Rat
conam Ra
Con Bamt
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Cons Citax
Cons Colutn
C Cot Or A
Cons Kaico
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Cop e*
Copr Lak
“CoraHo
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Coynaa Dav
Cream
Crte Lak
C»«s fexpl
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F'va Star
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Gold Rivar
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infergoid
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Joy Ind Ltd
Kant Srpy
KlonOav
Lada Oav
LaOuM
Laura
Lmc Raa
Lornav
LP indutt
M M Prepn
Makaoo
Marat kntr
M#rC V
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Midos
Mid Mtn
Moniray A
Ml SiCkr
Mt watn
Mtn Stott
Nadma
Nava*
Naw cn<at
N CincK
Nwrtt sivr
Naw Minai
N Privlr
NMX
Nofinair
N Atlantic
n Hart rat
N Bullion
Ntrn Eagia
NW Vtnt
0<Mw
Pacitfc Ras
Pa Acnaron
Parmnf
Pmtndr
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SIMO 13
ISOO Ik'
30033 91
3S300 70
4423 IS t
1000 7 j
4S0O »
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JSOO I7S
10001 20
SOOO 17
243S0 IIS
Parry Rvr
Plaint P
Prism Ras
OC Expl
Ottmo
Ramiar
Ramco Ind
Radter Mn
Raniks
Rio Plata
Rooart Mnt
Sabina
Sacnam ei
S Jacinto
Seaiertti
San tea
Snalmar
ShaM
SMd Oav
SIk Pram
Siimii Ltd
Sir City
S Cnial
S Ctinstl
Sir Ridga
S Spring
S Slndrd
Skat Res
SI oca n
Sonic Ray
SIAM Lak
Stampd
Sunhtc
Ts Reset
Tacoma rs
Tay Rvr
Thor Bxpl
Thundrwd
Tnia Hill Ms
Tinta SIv
Trwatt
Toumgn
Tcon Ros
Turitmo
tyaa
UCambrg
Untd Chief
Unitd Prtn
U Hoorn#
U Gold
U Rayera
giai Co
van Siivar
Vntraal
Vaster Ek
Wiccma
West Adara
W MmH
W Ring H
Wttn Warn
Wharf JSOO
Vkn Rev JOOO
Yukon Goto ISOO
Jnith 4000
Warrants
S«altmrk Wl 20000
M Atarc Wf 1000
Van slvr Wi 33000
Wicbm Wl 13700
Total salat, rest
-1 77
-3 27
-2 134
Thmat Nat 100 1SS ISS
Waror 2700 300 21
Wdwrd SOO lt0--« II’.
warrantt , and
Bmrt Ry wr ISOO 197 190
Total taiat. industrials
191700 04
3000 43
4100 27
21200 23
iSSOO 92
1000 n
2000 3S
SJS 012
120700 40
14000 14
4000 40
9100 74
3600 44S JSO 4S0
SOOO 170 1S9 199
Aaron
Abaca
Abaila Rat
Aiviia
Ambar
Arctic G S
Aurus
Avaiancf
Baach Gold
Satina
Bnvtta
Br Ras
Brant Bxpl
Br P inv
Bron Mns
Bur Old
C T Expnda
Camraico
Cannon
Canorei
Cantona
Catcad Rev
Chatam Rv
caavar
Coast Int
Cobra
Conv Cmnia
Cons Mon
Corvai
Cusac Ind
Dasher
Decade Oe
Dlta Rtfng
Diana
Dorchatlr
Dual Rev
Done Mrl
Edina
Envoy Ras
Espma
Focus Ret
Gb* Mnt
Gentry
Oaor
Gao Star
Gillian Min
Gold An Rt izSOO
Gtm Shmrk 1000
Gold Vally
Grng
Grt Bear
Grove E>p
Hatca Ret
Hiind Ouen
Highid Star
Hitac
HOkO
Hub
inti Shasta
Kandahar
Kanba Mn
Keith Cop
Kendal Mn
Caman Ra
Lion Mmav
Lou Max
Luaarn Mii
Lustra Gold
Mhna Mniv
Main! A
Mciaod
Mnv Dorad
Mtnaar M
Munoaa
Nahatici
13 DKlmat.
CURB
79 75 7
4000
1IS00
22SOO 24 20'vt
6000 0 I
4000 4 4
34S0 9 •
lOSOO 42 SS
4400 140 ISS
37S0Q 22 t 20
S4703 J9 34
26500 14 13
IJIOOe 33 20
4000 20 17
24000 23 II
•000 » 75
20S00 X 23
4S00 90 00
1000 4 4
24125 30 91
779000 35 30'>
ISOO IS IS
lOSOO 72 20
1000 13 12
2500 IS IS
nioe 24 21
9000 23 20 )
2S0O 6 4
iOSOO IS 10
14500 24 12
140 II II
433? 0 S
12000 24 16
■000 2S 2S
4500 40 30
10000 3 3
12000 It IS
9500 W 60
15000 19 15
500 12 17
nooo 43 36
2000 39 39
2S03S 106 102
47000 20 19
20000 12 10'j
•000 3 3
21500 21 17
1971 ROLLS ROYCE
SILVER SHADOW
“World Standard of Excallonca”
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$28,000
MOTORS LTD.
760 JOHNSON ST. 384-a036
(0.00264 AO) t-n
Interest paid Semi-annually, Monthly (Min. $5(XX))
or Compounded and paid at maturity
2
InterMt p(ld Annually
Vcloria: 752 A Fort St
(604) 388-6601
Vancouver: 850 West Hastings St.
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While Rock: 1463 Johnston Rd
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Long distance call us "collect ’
tZoni'ea’. Oijeber. Oiiawa Tnfooto.
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Vanccjver. Vetexa
Mpmotr Canada Daposrt kvauttnca CorRoraton
r
41 Advancav.
01 DacDnav,
27 Uhcnangad
New Cangt
1000
10
inoustrils
M 0
Niihex El
1500
71
Abbey Glen
t 1000
62S
625
425
675 365
Named
9000
U
All Van Pro
no
ISO
ISO
140
-10 2 50 120
Narco
SOOO
30
Ardiam Ind
3500
41
41
•l-l 65 35
N A Tech
SJOO
36
BBC Rty Un
2335
513 *
I3'4
13*
T 1 I3 e 12 *
Nu Energy
3000
40
Baled
700
490
490
490
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Olympian
50000
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SI76I
435
425
430
-S 43S 350
OnacA Exp
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1000
510 *
10 *
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70500
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100
519
19
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21 19
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6000
45
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100
523
23
23
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4500
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1000
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513
13
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4000
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500
57
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27500
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Rockai
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saadt Mit
Saratd Ov
Saturn Ret
Saa Cham
Sac rata Rat
Shatter
4»aam« Rat
Slvr Paits
Stoua Mtn
Skaivt
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aavrgn Mti
Stanholm
Stynro
Swim Lk
Tagut
Tapih
Thundr Crk
Taranada
TRV
vaioar Rat
vanaita
wavacom
Watiiay
Yaiannion
Taiai
2000
43S00
22SS00
SOOO
4S00
33SM
IOSOO
9000
30000
23SOO
SOOO
^ Jim team.
More than just the scores.
Want authoritative background on that game the night before? You'll find it
each morning in the Daily Colonist.
Jim Tang has been Sports Editor hero (or 32 years. And, along with his team of
sports writers and analysts, he’s bringing you a wealth of experience. And
information.
It s the first section a lot of oeople turn to each day, and with good reason.
Donl Start the day wrilhoiit k!
4500 $3
3000 21
11000 9
ISOOO 21
3000 7
3000 0
4700 110
29710 SS
ISOO SO
3009 13
79500 30
06500 74
ta<*A «urbt
60 40 4-10 90
35 A-t,a.v<.e5 41 09< imH,
total VOLUMB THIS WEEk
•7 Advancat. 149 D9(.<mtt.
iBBlnvaBBtaaii
f
■fr "fe *
1g Colonist victoria, B.C. Sunday, August 22, 1976
National titlists, past champs
to play in Canadian Amateur
Kicks, Sounders
in clutch game
MlimeMta Kicks forwsrd Ron Futeher, who scorei tiie first
goal tn n S'O win* sad Seattle Sonndem defender Adriso
Webster get Involved In s Nt of hsad*holding daring Sstnr*
day night North Ameriesn Hot'cer lucagae motion In
MlnnespoUt. The win earned Kicks a date with San dose,
3-d quarterfinal winners over Dallas. Toronto Metro-Croatia,
who edged Chtci^io S<3, and Tampa Bay Boudles, who ousted
New York Cosmos S-i, meet In the other semi-final with the
winners clashing for the championshl|) in settle's Klngdome
on Ang. 2S.
By JIM TANG
Three natlcMial champions,
including the defending
champion, and five former
winners ot the Canadian
men’s amateur golf cham¬
pionship are listed in the field
which will tee off at Royal
Colwood and Qxmtry Club on
Wednesday morning in a
72-hole pursuit of the Earl
Grey Cup.
D^ending is Jim Nelford, a
member of Vancouver's
Marine Drive club who is a
member the Brigham
Young University team.
Nelicrd, who won the
B.C champiemhip at the
Nanaimo Golf but was
unable to play on the Wljllng-
• don Cup team because of a
European tour by his college
team, came back to win the
Canadian tide at the River¬
side Cbuntzy Qub in St. John.
He was'unable to deferxl the
B:C championship this year,
but 1976 vlotoiries came in the
Pan-American and Western
Inter-coUegiate tournaments.
Expected to be among the
main challengers are South
Africa’s Gavin X^venson and
Juan Estrada, four^time Meic-
lean champion.
The 22-yean-ohl Lev«)son, a
member of the I&nsington
club in Transvaal, won the
South African Chamf^ last
year and played for his
Eskimos taste own medicine
EDMONTON* -- Edmonton
Eskimos learned something
about the other side of the
coin on Saturday ni^it.
The Grey Cup champions,
who had wan 15 of 16 games
decided in the last three min¬
utes during the past two sea-
Burrards win opener
NEW WTiSTMINSTER, (CP
— Vancoover Bnrmrd defeat¬
ed New* W'estmlnster Salmen-
bellles, 9-8, fai the first game
of die Weatern Lacrosse Asso-
cUUon best-ef-seven final
series before 1S7€ fans Satur¬
day nlgfaU
Second game of the best-of-
seven series wUl be played
Monday in Rlclunond with the
third game set for New West¬
minster on Tbnraday.
'the SalmonbeUiet, who
hadn’t played In nine days,
appeared flat against Bur-
rards, fresh from victory ov*er
Victoria ShamriM-ks in a beet-
of-seven semi-final aeries.
New Westminster ontshot
Vancouver 51;4S, but the shota
were directed mainly at Bur-
rards goalteoder Dave Evsoe.
Junior player Rico Belhisci
scored twice for Borrardi, as
did Dave Tasker and Ward
Sanderson. Bob Ikdmes, BUI
Foote and TaJd Vohatls scored
the other Vancott%*er goala
Brian Taaker, Dave IHbtbe-
son and Wayne Goee scored
twice each for SalmonbeUics
with singles each going to Jim
Johnston, and Chuck Med-
hurst.
Major le^e baseball
AMIKICAN LIASUI
iMtsrs Divitlee
W L Pet. ML
New York 73 47 AOS —
aeltimore 43 57 J31 10
Cievelai^ 59 43 AM 1i
Oetroir M 4) .479 IS
Boston 57 43 .475 M
MliwftukM 53 44 AO NW
wettsm OWItiM
W L Pet. OtL
Kansu City 74 a A13 —
Oakland 45 O JO tW
Mfnnasote 41 43 .494 14
TtMU 51 54 A75 UW
Chicaoo S3 49 .434 31W
California 53 70 .431 33
Baltimore 303 003 110 000-10 33 0
Chioaso 030 OOS 301 001^11 15 0
May. Paoes (4). Mertlnn (4),
Holswortn (4), Millar (I), Coailar
4-13 (9) and Damosav; Johnson.
Forster (3); Jatfaraon (3), Carroll
(7), Hamilton $-5 (9) and Euian.
. Homt runa— aattbnore. DaCIncas
(7ih); aumbry (4tt)). Chicaeo, Bro-
hamar (Tth).
Kansu City 300 300 0O1— 4 14 1
Milwaukee OtO 001 000- 3 4 1
Pattin 4-10. Has (I), Lttlall (I)
and Stinson; Colborn 7-13. Sadacki
(4), Castro (9) and Perlar .HOm*
run—Mllwaukaa, Joshua (4th).
Oakland ' 100 000 001— 3 7 0
Boston 010 »1 5 9 0
Bosman 4-1, Bahnaan (S), Lindb-
lad (B) and Henty. Newmen (I);
Cleveland 7-4, Murphy (9) and
Fitk. Heme rune-Oekland. Beyler
(13th). doston-<oaopar (Dm).
Mi->nesotB O?0 000 100 4— 7 13 0
Detroit 300 000 000 0— 3 I 1
.e 'em, Aibury (7). Hushes 7-10
(B), Campbell (10) and wvnegar;
F; * ch u-s end Kimm. Home run
-^nnaaMa, Brye (1st).
California 130 000 OOO I—4 13 0
New York 000 300 OOO 0- 3 5 0
Ross. latt 3-0 (7) tna
H i*>rty; Ellis, Jeckson (3). Tl-
drow 4d (t) and Atonson. Home
r' IS—California. Torres, (ith).
New York, Oambte, (lath).
Cifveiend 300 000 100- 3 7 0
Texas DO 013 OOx— 5 13 0
Brown 7A. Buskay (4) end
Fossa; Perry 13-10 and Sundbero.
Home run—Cla^and. Pcw^l (Tth).
NATIONAL LIAOUB
iMtem Dtvfslan
. W L Pet. aSL
Phfladafphla 79 41 .450 —
flttibureh 44 55 13W
New York 62 41 J04 IIVT
Chl^ M 40 .an 35
St. UuH S U A4I 34
Montreal ^ n .353 34
Waitsni Dlvistan
W L Pet. OBL
Cincinnati 79 45 .437 —
Los AnealM 4| 54 i57 10
San Olaeo M 65 .400 191^
Houston 40 44 A74 »
Atlonte 57 ^ AM 33
San Francisco 54 71 .m 25)T
New York 001 lOO 401— 7 W 1
San Olego 000 001 00(k- 1 4 1
Koosman 14*7 and Crete; Griffin
7-S. Frelslaban (7). ABetiar (I) and
Kendall. Home run—San Olago,
Fuantu <M). /
AAootreal
O00O00O4DO0O00O0—4 14 3
San Francisco
ID 001 003 000 000 1— 5 n I
Ro^, ToykY (7), Murray (9).
Karrmn (11), Dunning (13), Lang
1-3 (15) and Carter; D'AcquItte,
William (7)7 Lavelta (0), Haeverto
(11), Moffltt (13), Dressier 3-B 04)
and Radar. Home run—Mercer
07th).
Chicago 101 100 000— 3 4 0
Cincinnati 000 1M 010- 2 7 2
Reuschel 11-1, Sutter (•) and MIt-
tarwM:: Herman 1M, Bor^ (ri
and Bench. Home run—Ckiclnnetl,
Morgen (23nd).
Houston 010 030 000— 4 4 3
Phlla. 000 141 lOx— 7 13 0
Rkherd 14-13, Pantz (7), Sambite
(7) and Johnson; Kaet 114. Chris¬
tenson (4), Reed (7) end Boone.
Home run I t o ua len, Johraon
(7th). _
Atlanta OD OD 010— 4 11 1
St. Louis 100 010 000— 2 11 1
Morton 44, Oevlna (5) and tor-
rail; Forsch 54, Solofnon (4), Wal-
face (6) and Simmons.
Pittsburgh 000 000 010— 1 3 1
Ldb Angatae m ID OOx— 5 10 1
Moose 34, Tekulvt (4) Madkh
(I) and Sangulllan; Sutton 154 ai^
Rodriguez. Home runs—Pttteburgh,
Parker (tth). Los Angtiu, Garvey
(9m).
Sport today
SOFTBALL
II a.m. S and i:3B p.mr.Coo-
tinuatlon of Greater Victoria
gnnior playofft, Central
Park.
1 p.m. — Stuffy McOhmls
Hen's League, either last
game of seml-ftnal aeries or
first game of flaal aeries,
Central Park.
BASEBAIX
1 and S p.m. Senior Ama¬
teur League playoff double-
header, Gorge Hotel vu. Knbi-
ceka Home Service, Lambrick
Park.
CRICKET
1 :S0 p.m. — District Aaaoci-
atlon: Nanaimo ^s. Alcoa,
Windsor Park.
LACROSSE
8 p.m. — Western Canada
Junior League, seveoth game
of bent-of-aeven aeml-tlaal.
New Westminster Salmon-
beUles vs. Victoria McDon-
aids, Csqnlmalt Sports
Centre.
Monday
SOFIBALL
d:9B p.m. — Stuffy McGIn-
■is League, elthd^ first or sec¬
ond game of playoff final
series, Central Parti.
BASEBALL
d:SB p.m. —> Senior Amateur
League, third game of best-of-
five final, Gorge Hotel vs. Ku-
biceks Horae Service, Lam-
brick Park.
sons, were edged out 20-18 by
Ottawa Rough Riders when
Gerry Organ kicked a last-
second 47-yard field goal.
Defeat, w4dch came before
a seU-out crowd of 25.882.
came after the Riders . ap-
l>eared to have blown their
chances several times with
stupid play. It denied the Es¬
kimos a first-place tie in the
Western Football Conference
and moved the Riders four
points ahead in the Eastern
Conference.
It appeared for 25 minutes
as if the Eskimos were going
to wipe out the memories of
having allowed 70 points in
their last two games.
Quarterback smartly by
veteran Tom WlUdnson, who
completed his first 11 passes,
seven of them to Dcui War¬
rington, ttiey moved into a
14-3 lead by the sbeth minute
ctf the second quarter. They
api>eared to be in full control
ahiMugh Riders did cut the
lead to 15-9 before the Inter¬
mission with the second and
third of his four field goals,
the third one coming 51
yards.
However. Wilkinson injured
an elxiw in the third quarter
and the Edmmton attack
bogged - down a The
Riderp made a voluntary
quarteiback change, bringing
In exciting Gondredge Hollo¬
way tor Tonl^ dements, and
Holloway just managed to
overcome a rash of errors.
iBskimos held on in the third
quarter, adding a point on a
uide field-goal try from 33
yards by Dave Cutler, but it
was maindy due to the help
provided by the Riders.
The Ottawa chib got within
12 yards at one time, but
called for a fake field-goal
try. Instead of three points
they turned the ball over on
the Edmonton 36-yard line.
Coming back near the end
of the quarter, they were set
back on the fhut play of the
fourth quarter when Ftolloway
tripped and fell after taking
the handoff and fumbled the
ball away. Ihey got it back on
an interception, and HbUoway
finally got a touchdown on a
26-yard end-pass to Moody
Jackson — but not before the
Riders had been moved back
fronx the i:^-yard line and lost
a touchdown on an illegal pro¬
cedure penalty.
Organ’s convert put Ottawa
Next game: -Monday—Toronto at
.vu>nirfai.
First Quarlar
1. Edmonton, touchdown, War¬
rington, 13-yard peas from Wilkin-
sor. (Cutler convert) 3:51
3. Ottawa. tMd goal. Organ,
from 29 varos, 7:33.
Second Wuartar
3. Edmonton, touchdown, Harrell,
two-yard oaas from Wilkinson
(Cutler convert) S:5S.
4. Ottawa, field goal. Organ,
from 31 yards, 9:34.
5. Ottawa. |Md goal, Organ,
from £1 yarus, i5:0Q.
Third Quariir
4. Edmonfon, singlt. Cutler, from
13 yarda 7:45.
Fourth Qaartar
7. Ottawa, touchdown, Jackson,
34-ysrd peas from Holloway (Organ
convert) 4:41.
5. Ottawe, singlt. Organ, from 34
yards, 11:09.
9. Ednwmon, field goal. Cutler,
from 32 yarda. t3:D.
10. Wawa. floid goal. Organ,
from 47 Tards, 14:59.
Ottawa } « 0 11—D
Edmonton 7 7 1 s—u
ST* , Pint downs **^4
Dl Ysrds rushing S
314 Yards pasting 344
414 Nat otfanca 311
14-35 Pasaas.mad4-trigd 32-if
3 Intarcaptlong 1
Fumblas-lcM 3-3
A43J Punts^varaga 4-40.5
19-44 Panaltl44 w di a35
■ ■ • Is )rgrdg a ‘
ahead, IS-IS. then the Riders
blew another chance. This
time they got within 28 yards,
were ttuxtwn back to the Ed-
mofiton 36 and got only to
17-15 when Organ was wide
with a field-goal try.
Riders then helped set up a
22'yard field goal by Qitler
with a rough-play penalty
taken after a successful pass.
That left them with a minute
and 40 seconds in which, to do
something about the 17-18 def¬
icit - .
H(Mloway got them within 35
yards with- about 30 seconds
remaining, then the riders
took two successive five-yard
pexuiltles for illegal pcticedure
to practically put Organ
out of fieldgoal range. 'They
followed that with a gamble
against time on a running
ptey. Art Green got them six
yards, and Organ beat the
ck>ck by a eeoond with the
winning kick.
♦ # #
WtSTtRN C0NPIRINC8
P W L T P A PtS.
Sask. 5 5 1 0 lU 71 10
Edmonton 4 4 i 0 il7144 s
B.C. Done I 3 3 0 94 91 4
Winnipeg 5 1 4 0 134 114 2
Oilgary 5 0 4 1 47 144 1
Toro(
. 5 3 3 0 .
Montroal 5 1 3 1 74 117 3
Hamilton S I 4 0 41 ID 2
Plans pushed
despite
assassination
BUENOS AIRES (AP) —
The mitttary fovwaineBt
reaffirmed Its intentloa Satur¬
day to stage ttie 1978 World
Soccer Cap cbamploiishlp In
ArgentlBa despite the terror¬
ist aseggslBitton of ttie pres¬
ident of the champtottshlp or¬
ganising committee. The com¬
mittee president, retired Gen.
Omar C. Aetts, was killed
Thursday when suspected ter¬
rorist gnnmen fired at btxn as
he left Us home la WUde. a
Buenos Aires sabnib. Artis
had been ^ypolated only ttiree
weeks ago, aad he died a few
hours before be was sche¬
duled to give his first news
conference.
yardg ruahing^^n|H|utJ|Mm lotaaa.
Rushing: Ottawa. Holloway 9-74,
Oraan 15-D: Edmonton, Barnttla
14^. HiMi 3-14.
Paialns: Ottawa, Polar 5-114. Ga-
brlti 3-75: Edmonton, Warrington
10-144, Horrell 4-36.
Forego upset
OCEAXPORT. N.J. (AP) —
Greentree Stable’s Hatchet
Man. making his move along
thd inside niter Intr^id Hero
forced Forego wide in the
stretch, scored a cne-length
victory Saturday 4n the
3116,4M Amocy Haskell Hand¬
icap at Monmouth Park.
Forego’s rider, Jacinto Vas-
qiuez, lodged foul claims
against both Intrepid Hero
and Hatchet Man, but both
were disallowed.
Pro football
NPL UrtOltHra
Dtnvtr 52, team* 7
New 6i«l^ D. Atlanta 17.
Miami D. Tampa Bay 31.
Kansaa City A Washington D.
Los AngMas D' Oekland 14.
New York jafs 37, Houston 24.
Dallas 16. Oatrott 14.
St. Louis D, Chicago lA
country in the Commonwealth
matches. He was selected to
South Africa’s Eisenhower
Cup team this year and re¬
cently qualified to play in the
U.^. Amateur chajnplonshis}.
Estrada's record indicates
he Is the top Amateur golfer
in his country. He won the
Mexican championship in
19S7, 1968, 1960 and 1976; he
was a number of the Mexican
team In the world amateur in
1966,1962,1964, 1966 and 1968;
he played In the Masters tour^
nament in. 1961, 1962 and 1963,
and he was a member of the
M^can Americans Cup team
in 1954, 1966, 1968, 1960, 1961,.
1983. 1965 and 1967.
Fbrmer Canadian cham¬
pions trying t^ regain the
Early Grey Otpin four-time
winner Nidc WeVock. two-
time winner Doug Roxburgh,
Gary Cowan, Keith Ale.xander
and Jimmy Doyle.
Roxburgh, who won in 1972
and 1974 earlier this year
won the B.C ch^pionship
for the fourth time in eight
years, is generally rated as
the fellow most likely to un¬
seat Nelford.
RoTdiurgh is well acquaint--
ed with the Roykl Oohvood. It
was there he hit his peak in
1972, setting a 72 -)k^ tour¬
nament record for th club by
shooting a onerunder-per 279
to win his secraxl ptt>vincial
championship. He finished
68-68 in that one and is be¬
lieved to be the only tour¬
nament golfer to ever shoot
successive stfo^iar rounds at
Colwood.
He recently qualified to
play In the 1^ U.S. Amateur
and it’s reported he is anxious
to win a spot cm Canada’s
Commonwealth team so that
he can get the chance to play
in the 1977 British Amateur.
No one in the field has yet
acquired a record to match
WeeikKik’s. The Ontario veter¬
an, who D a member of the
Golf Hall of Fame and the
Canada Sports Hall of Fame,
has been a scratch golfer for
an amazing 36 years.
That is probably the most
impressive of all. but In addi¬
tion to winnUig the Canadian
championship in 1957, 1963.
1964 and 1966, be has won the
Ontario Open seven times, the
Ontario Amateur eight times,
toe Canadian Senior twice,
toe Ontario Senior five times,
and he has been the low ama¬
teur in toe Canadian Open 14
times.
WeBlock has played for On¬
tario 23 tim«» in the Willlng-
don Cup match, has been a
member of toe Canadian
Comnumwealth team five
tirnes, and the Canadian Ei¬
senhower Cup team four
times.
Cowan, also a member of
Canada's Golf HaQ of Fame,
reached the Canadian Ama¬
teur final five times when it
had a match-ptaty format,
winning in 1961. Three of bis
losses were to Alexander in
I960, to Weslock in 1964 and to
Doyle in 1968.
A twodime U.S. amateur
champkxi (1966 and 1971),
Cewan has represented On¬
tario on 14 WlUingdon Cup
teams, has been a member of
Canada’s Americas Cup team
six times, a member of Com¬
monwealth matches teams
fotir times and a member of
Canada’s World Cup amateur
team.
He also has a (Canadian jun¬
ior championship, four On¬
tario amateur titles and one
Ontario Open crown, an event
in which he has been runner-
iq> three times, to Ids cre(^.
Alexander of Edmonton and
Doyle of IKTnnipeg arc veter¬
an WUIingdon Oqipers.
Among many other interest¬
ing possibQtties are Rafael
Alarcon, one of Mexico’s out¬
standing young players, and
Dave Allen, the only British
player in the field of 162.
Alarcon was selected to the
Mexican Elsenhower C>ip
team this year and was toe
individual <toampion in toe
lasit national toteavdub tour¬
nament in his country.
Allen, a member of the Wel-
wjm Garden City Golf Qub.
hat won the West of England
and Hertfordshire County
championships and reached
the 16s of the British Amateur
championship in 1966 and
1975.
The field also includes 14
U.S. golfers — from Bellineh-
am. and Medina, Wato.,
Clackamas -and Portland,
Ore., Houston. Oikland Peb¬
ble Beach, Sacramento. St.
Paul, Baltimore. Canton
Maas., Punta Gorda, Fla.,
Bemaidvllle, NJ. and Grosse
Isle. Mkh.
Also In as of Satuzxfoy after¬
noon were 19 Vancouver
land fiHfers, 16 from the Vic-.
torta area. There were 62
Britiah Columbians in all, and
Alberta has tiie next best rep¬
resentation with 29 entrants,
and Ontario is next with 22.
No otoer province has more
than five .golfers, axkd Satkat-
chewan. New Brunswick,
Prince Edward Island and
Newfoundland are represent¬
ed only by the four mentoers
of their WiDingdon Cup team.
The WUIingdon CUp match,
as is usual, will be divided on
scores in the first two rounds
of the Amateur.
Defending the interiirovin-
ciai trophy Is B.C., winner
four times in the last five
years, and the winner when
the ([Canadian Amateur was
played at Royal Colwood in
1967.
The B.C. team as of now is
made up of Roxburgh, veten*
an John Russell and Don Grif¬
fiths of Vancouver and Cec
Ferguson of Victoria. Fer¬
guson's amateur status is
under question and ROGA
decision won’t be made public
until Monday afterooon. It is
bellev^, however, that he
will be allowed to play. If he
is ruled ineligible his place
will be taken by Dave Mick of
Victoria.
Players will go off in three¬
somes with the first tee-off
time on Wednesday and
Thursday to be either 7:45 or
8 fr.m. No decision on which
had been made as of Saturday
night, but It was announced
that WUIingdon Cuf) players
mtUI start from the lOtb tee cn
Wednesday. The first trio will
go off at either noon or 12:15
p.m., depending on the de-
ebJion on 7:45 or 8 a.m.
On Thursday, WUIingdon
Qip players win go off from
the first tee. starting at eitoer
7 ;45 or 8 ajn.
‘ Nick Weslock
Keith Alexander
Doug Roxburgh
Soccer playboy claims
change in living style
LONDON (AP) — George
Best, the &^tish soccer star
who acquired a reputation as
a playb^ off the field, flew
into loindon Saturday and
said he was planning to get
married and settle down.
With 23-year-old Briitish
model Angela MacDonald-
James at his aide. Best told
reporters at Londem’s
Heathrow Aiiport: "We want
to get married in l^ndon as
soon as we can.”
Best, 30, and MacDonald-
James flew In frmn Los An¬
geles where he had played a
stint for Los Angeles Aztecs
of the North American Soccer
League.
He said he planned to re¬
turn to toe English Leagu^ as
a striker for a Second Divi-
skxi club, Fulham in wttt
Londm.
In the late 19608 and early
19706, Best’s dazzling foot¬
work on the field and playboy-
antics off it made him one of
Britain’s • best-known sports
figures.
But he told r^xirters Satur¬
day: “Now I’m getting mar-
ri^, 1 am gemg to have to
calm down. Fve given up
searching for the good
times.”
Angela added: “I’m making
sure he sticks to the quiet
life."
Best and lAtecDonald-James
started seeing each other in
Los Angeles about three
montoa. ago but found they
had actually met briefly eigiii
years, earlier at a London e.\-
hibitkxi where Angela was
i^-urking.
'T di^’t want to go straight
into First Division football al-
tliough I did approach two
First Division elute. I want to
see what my game is like and
Fulham is an ideal club to
oome back to. There are still
a few things to be discussed,
but I will be watching the
Fulham games until I can
play.”
Swim marks fall
in Canadian meet
VANCOUVER (CP) — Ca^
nadlan and Commonwealth
records feU Saturday at the
Canadian swimming cham-
pionsMps as Becky SnUto of
Edmonton and Robin Sor-
sigUa of Beaconsfield, Que.,
broke their own standards.
Miss Smith won the
200-metre individual medley
in two minutes, 20.64 seccxids,
almost two seconds faster
than her previous (I^nac^n
and C^cxnmofiwealth mark ctf.
Additional sport
P. 16,20,21, 22
2 ;22.07. Second-place Nancy
Garapick of Halifax finished
in 2:2L72. Joann Baker of
Thunder Bay. was third.
Miss Oorsiglia broke her
Canadian and Commonwealth
record of 1:13.92 in the
100-metre, breastetroke. finish¬
ing in 1:13.39, just ahead of
Lisa Bcxxholt of Vancouver in
1:13.95. Third was Judy
Garay of Toronto^
The first two swimmers in
the men’s 200-metre individu¬
al medley broke the Canadian
record of 2:10.65 and finished
in 2K«.37.
Former Lion
calls it quits
DENVER (AP) — Denver
Broncos coach John Ralston
has 4mnounced toe retire¬
ment of Bubba Bridges, a
defensive guard who played in
toe Canadian Ft^ball
League. Bridges, who attend¬
ed the University of CMorado,
was Driver’s lOftHDund
choice in the 1975 National
Fhotbell League draft
Bridges was r^eaaed by
Edmonton Eskimos af toe
CFL after three games of toe'
1973 season, and the B.C.
lions -signed him as a free
agent the following teaaon. He
was traded to Hamilton Tiger-
Cats mid-way through the
1974 season and played twp
games for tlie Ticats.
Graham Smith of Edmon-
don and BUI Sawchuk ot
Thunder Bay finished in a
dead heat.' TtUrd-plEce Gary
MacDonald of Mission Cty,
B.C, was wen back in 2:11.72.
Smith earlier won the
lOO-metre breaststroke in
1:05.88, well under his Canadi¬
an record ol 1:03.%, but still
more than two seconds ahead
of Roman Baumann of Sud¬
bury*. Camil Chavalier of Que¬
bec C^ty was third.
Rebecca Perrott of New
Zealand won the women’s
iOO-metre freestyle in 4:18.24.
Gail Amandrud of Ottawa was
.second and Wendy Quirk ot
Pointe Qaire. Que.. was third.
Steitoen Badger of Winnipeg
won the men’s 400-metTe free¬
style in 4 K)1.09. off his <>na-
dian mark ot 4:06.14. Sawchuk
was second and lillchael Kerr
of Vancouver was third.
Rob Grundison of Victoria
came up with Ids best per¬
formance ever in the national
championships finishing sev¬
enth in the 200-metre individu¬
al medley.
HOCKEY
LONDON BOXING
CLUB
OtitM
M| ‘6’ Htckty
wiNtUrt
PracUcM
TUESDAY. AUG.24
B P.M. at
Gloria Paarkas Arana
AN players of Inlarmadlala
“A” o aHbra are invilad to at-
ESQU/MALT
SPORTS CENTRE
ENROLL NOW
1976-77
CURUN6 SEASON
start* Oct. 1st
, CNOUIRIt* WELCOME
Pl^ 386-3261
OPOWeSWAILAMiFIM
NEWCURLBRAM
KHWiaXIW A NMHT
06 BAT OF YOUR CHOKE
Learn
JUDO
SBf^BICE
DQC rmanciirc
ocLr UMnWmiC
PHYSCAL a MBITAL
OiSCHlJNE
at Ms
Victoila Jido Club
718Jotm*on8L
MON., WED., FM.
t;30-6;00 iMik
A
REECURLHnatNlCS
M fMCTKE ME TO AU
1
Miae
c
lirORrCERTIE
UMEIt
U0IErE«E.00An.LEA0UEt
Mart. MIXEB. SENIORS.
tOYT. IHU. SCHOOLS.
SEHVKE lEAOUES.
I Everyone Infoys
Curling at the
REMINDERl
lOOKNOWFOR
HOCKH NX REMTALS
,ANB aUTIIN PRimu
JUNIOR ‘‘A" LACROSSE
Waalam Canada Ma)or Junwr Lnagu*
PLAYOFFS - SEMI-FINAL
MCDONALDS m NEW WESTMINSTER
tEROiY.Aai. a—lo.n.
ESQUIMALT SPORTS CENTRE
AiiHitZBO
atlOORtt a DAT I1.7S
★ jk iS: •
^ 20 CDlonlSt Victoria, B.C, Sunday, August 22,
Lawn botvling roundup
Flora Martin adds
to trophy collection
9y REQ REl'yOLDS
Flora Martin is becoming
as line a lawn bcM'Ier as sbe
is a ourl^.
The Burnside bowler earned
her fourth championship in
three weeks by capturing the
club singles tide vdth a 15-13
win over defending-champlon
Marg Adierton Saturday at
Burnside.
Mrs. Martin, who skipped
rinks to the Canadian senior
women’s curling cham¬
pionship in 1973 and 1974. cap¬
tured the ’'Champion of
ChanH^ions" title earlier this
month and last weekend was
on the winning rink and tri¬
ples in the Vancouver Island
Assoclatian’s annual Holiday
ToumamesvL
Jessie Kinneard, w4k)
skipped the xinloi and triplet
CHAIN LINK FENCING
•Ai
“■r ^
GOOD FENCES MAKE
GOOD NEIGHBORS
HE8IDENTIAI ★ COMMENCIAL ★ MDUSTMAl
3 ft. to 12 ft. or a chain link with completa privacy,
green'or galvanized.
NOJOBISTOOBieMTOOSMAU
FREE ESTIMATE—NO OBLIQATION
VAN ISLE CHAliTuNKFENaNG
386-1841 ^VENIN^
Victoria
FIGURE SKATING
Club
SKATING SEASON OPENING SBOBini ZSi. ISTG
ADULTS — NEW THIS SEASON
A fee for Wednesday night skating only.
Come and join us for a social night of skating.
Thera will be Pre-Registrttlon days In Main Lobby of
Memorial Arena on Segt. 4tn and llth, 1976 — 10:00 to
12:00 Noon and Wednaeday, Sept 8tn, 1976 — 7:Q0 to
9:00 P.M.
No registration at Hocking A Forbes.
Registration on above days
and at Sssslons when season starts.
FMt are at lollowt:
Junior & Intermediates $35 plus. $3
Seniors $47 plua $$
Adults $53 phM $$
FULL MBMBERSHtF ^
Adults $35 plus $3 /
WEDNESDAY NIGHT ONLY
Family Plan $S4 plua $3
lor each member ol the tamlly
Associate Membership $5 plue $3
QUALIFIED INSTRUCTORS
One Free Qroup L esse n Per Week
ANY MAN 1* yeers end over who hat not ptevleu^ been
a member al the Club may skate til ChrMmat FREE.
FIGURE SKATES ARE A MUST FOG AU SKATERS
Oroup or Private leiio n i else available
Take a seat
-with you!
Carry it and use it as
a walking stick-then
unfold it when you feel like
resting. Ideal for the outdoor
sports buff who likes to be
comfortable wherever he goes.
Light, strong, non-rusting.
With brown or blue trim.
$9.95
BIRKS
sB
EWELLERS
706 YateiSt HilWdc Shopping Centra
winners in the Holiday Toui^
nament, won the “B" title at
Burnside by downing Marion
Barr. 15-12.
Atherton was also a
member of the winning rink
and irij^ea in the Holiday
event.
Rollle Mercer toc4c the
men’s title Saturday with a
15-13 Svin over novice Doug
Benedict.
At Lake HIU, FTancine
Linders and Art Shaw won the
Dogwood TrcgAty with a 17-9
win over Neil McKinnon and
Susie Ooutts In the all-Lake
rail final of the mixed Scotch
doubles tournament.
A total of 32 pairs started
out in the week-long con^>eti-
tion.
The Doer Cup mixed scotch
doubles concluded a.t Oak Bay
Tuesday.
The final was an all-Oak
Bay affair with Agnes Wicks
and John Wise beating FHsie
Young end Ben Lang. 31-32.
Francea Campbell and
Gerry Bing caf^red "B”
event honors wUh an 18-12 de¬
cision over £>'elyn and Alf
Leahey.
Mrs. Widcs earlier teamed
with Trudy Neelandi to win
the Oak Bay club pairs title
with a 14-12 victory over Mrs.
litahey and Gladys I^Uets.
★ ★ ★
GREEN PIECES — Vic
W«at w^ forced ,to cancel ita
field day scheduled for Satur¬
day because the new club¬
house isn’t quite finished and
there were no facilities for
refreshments, Games chair¬
man Fred SalUa Jr. says they
may ask to borrow another
club to hold the field day but
added that it was likely tint
the field day would be passed
up this year. The clubhouse
should be finished within the
next month ... Joad Tuner
of Victoria West is one Island
bowler who is In Ottawa to
watch the Canadian <^am-
pionships which start today
and run through Wednesday
... Club champlonshipa ooh-
tinue through this week at
most chibs and the Yarrow
Ojp men’s pairs tournament
is Sept. 4-6 at Canadian Pacif¬
ic club.
Flurries of goals mark
soccer season opening
Sandra Post
Sandra
catches
Kathy
ST. PAUL. Minn. (AP) —
Sandra Post shot a two-under-
par 71, including birdies on
the laat two holes, to move
into a tie for the lead after
second-round play Saturday
at the 355,000 Patty Berg golf
tournament.
Post, a former Oakville,
Ont., resident now living in
Florida, and Kathy Whit¬
worth, who shot an even par
73 t Saturday, were tied at
seven under par after 36 holes
on the 6.023-yard KeUer
Course.
Bonnie Bryant, the only lef^
handed gol^ on the Ladiea
Professional Golfers’ Associa¬
tion tour, e^ed one hole on
her way to a 71 to finish at
five un^ par and in third
spot
Jan Stephenson carded a 72
for 143 and Jane Blalock,
whose five-underi>ar 68 was
low score of the round was at
144.
Jocelyne Bourassa of Sha-
winigan. Que.. slipped to a 79
irfter an c^iening 73 for 152
while Patty Berg, the 57-yeaiv
old after whom the tour¬
nament was named finished
the second round at 156, mis^
log the cut by two strokes.
Cricket matches
ends in draws
Albion and Cowichan played
to a draw Saturday but the
two points gave Albioh sole
possession of second place in
Hhe Victoria and District
Cricket Association.
John Buchanan scored 47
runs and Keith Dixon 27 runs
as AlWon scored 149 runs for
nine wickets at Beacon Kill
Park but Howard Martin
scored 67 runs for Oowlchan
which had 106 runs for six
wickets when time ran out.
In bowling, Martin took
three wickets 'for 44 runs
while Alblons Alan Carter
took two for 31 runs.
In the only other matrii,
league-leading Incogs played
to a draw with Alcoe at St.
Michaels Univeraity School.
Incogs ^scored ISO runs for
eight wickets knd Akos had
75 runs for eight wickets when
time ran out
Erick Kjekstad scored 32
runs and Sevan Grant 26 runs
for Incogs while Akos bovrier
Mike Dodd took three wickets
for 23 runs.
John Scofield scored 23 runs
for Alcos while Incogs "Rtib
Wilson took three wickets for
25 runs and Dave Gladdera
took three for 37 runs.
r w L Pris.
10 4 a 1 ai
'i f g
Inooss
Aloion
JkICM
Cowichsn
fiArMimo '
111 S
TO 2 4 i 14
All-Blacks lose
PRETORIA (Reuter) —
Northern Transvaal defeated
touring New Zealand All
Blacks Rugby Union team
29-27, Saturday. 1116 irinners
led 13-6 at the half.
LONDON (CP) — The 1976
regular^eason aoccer sched¬
ule oi>en«d Saturday in
dixTught-strkdeen Engtend with
Everton highlighting First Di¬
vision action in a 4-0 win over
Qiieen't Pairk Rangers.
As the heat wave oorrUnued,
Everlon »cc»«d three first-
half goeds against Rangers,
who finished s econd in the
Ifjnglirii League First Division
last season.
'Three goals vvere scored in
a span of three minutes in a
2-2 draw between Leicester
and Manchester City, while
Aston Villa blaidced West
Ham 40 after knocking in
three goals within a IS^nlnute
spell after toe interval.
hi one of the few lowacoiv
ing Pint Dhision matches,
league champkms Liverpool
beat Norwich. lO, with a 55th-
minute goal by Steve Heigh-
way. It might not have been
an emphatic victory but at
least it was a satisfying one
for Liverpool \riikh l«t 3-1 at
home to NorMch last season.
Everton’s star was centre-
forward Bob Latchfbrd who
scored a goal in each halt
against Rang««. Goalkeeper
Phil Parka, who gave away
an own goal, and Mike Ber¬
nard, with a first-half penalty,
were Eveiton'a other scorers.
David Jones, Everton’t
right back, was sent off after
18 minutes. Charlie George of
Deihy was another who f^nd
it difficult to keep a cool head
in the 27-degree Celsius heat
as he was ordered off in the
85th minute against Newcas¬
tle.
The goal rush at Leicester
started in the 63rd minute
when Manchester Oty's
Dennis IXieart matched a
first-half goal by Brian Aldeiv
son. A minute later Chris
Garland restored Leicester’s
lead but almoat immediately
Joe Hoyle made it 2-2.
Andy Gray, after 4it min¬
utes, and Ray Graydon, in the
54th and 60th minutes, gave
Aston Villa its flying start in
the second half against West
Ham. Gray scored again to
complete the rodt of the Lon-
ckm club.
But there were no goals for
toe tiiree men who obtained
the highest prices in transfers
— Malcolm Macdonald, who
moved to Arsenal from N^-
oastle for $586,000, 'Tony Cknv
rie, to Lee<ii from Sheffield
United for $422,000, and David
Johnson, to Liverpool frwn
Ipswich tor $352,000.
For Macdonald, his debut
for Arsenal was a bitter af¬
fair. Not only did he fail to
swre but his tram lost, going
down 1-0 at h(Hne to newly-
promoted Bristol aty. It was
BrlstoTs first game in the top
division tor 65 years and they
celebrated the return with a
66th minute winner from Paul
Cheesley.
It looked as though it was
going to be a losing start for
Currie as Leeds trailed West
Bromwich Albion, aribther
side up from the Second Divi¬
sion, two goals at halftime.
But fixm the Second Division,
LONDON (CP) - RMults of
ftfcctr somoi pioyod Soturdoy In
Brittin:
■NOLItH LIAOUI
UlVMiM I
Arttnol 0 Bristol C 1
AMon VIMo 4 WMt Horn 0
ipowich 3 TotTormAm \
LtAds 2 WaaI arom 2
UlcAStor 2 Min C 2
LIvATpool 1 Norwich 0
Wfn , U 2 Blrminghsm 2
MlOdlAA^ouah 1 CovAntry 0
NAWCA$fio 2 DATby 2
OuAAn's PR 0 lEvATton 4
StokA 0 SundATlADd 0
Dlvl$)An II
BlAckburn 3 Bolton 1
BriftOI R \ BlACKpool 4
ChArltoo 0 CArOMTa
Fuinom 2 Notts p 2
Horoford ) Hull o
Luton 2 ShofHtM U 0
Notts C 1 MMlwOll 2
Oldhom 2 Plymouth 2
Oriont 0 Chwsoo 1
SouThompton i CArllsl# 2
WovorhAmpton 0 BurnlAy 0
Oivisfon III
Brlohton 3 Oxford 2
Bury 2 GrImsOy 0
ChAAtATflAid 0 NorthAmpton 0
Crystil P 1 York Q
Gilllnohom 2 KoAdinb 3
Lincoln I ShrtwsbufY 1
MAnsflAld 3 Preston I
Poterborough 0 RothArtiem 2
ShtHlAid W 0 Woissii 0
SvMndon 1 Port Veit 0
TrAnmer# 0 ChAstAr 1
Wrexhem 2 ^rtsmouth 0
mvisioii IV
Aldershot 2 ^odford )
Brentford 0 Bornsioy i
Cemjjrldeo.a Colchoslor 0
“13
Cem^ldeo 2 Colchoslor
Hsiliax 2 Bornomouth 3
Hsrtlopo^ 2 Exftor 2
Newp^ 0 Stockport I
Scunthorpo 0 Rochdal# 1
SoutheM 2 Wetford I
Southport 2 DoncMter 2
SwansAA 2 Derllnston T
Workington t Crow* 0
Torquay I Hoddmfltid 0
SCOTTISH LIAOUI CUP
Abordeon 1 Ayr 0
Albion 0 AnoAdowbenk 0
Arbroath 0 Celllc 5
BArwM I Porfsr 1
Brechin 2 Stenhousemulr g
Clyde 2 AlrdrlAonleris 3
Dunf)btrton 1 Dundee U 2
Dundee 0 Portick 2
Dunfermline 0 Clvdebenk I
Falkirk 1 Eeet PHe 2
Hamilton 4 Stranrser 1
Hearts 2 Motherwell 1
Kiimemock 1 St. Mirren 1
Morton 7 Cowdenbeath I
Ou^ of S t AMm 2
Retth 0 Queen's Pk 1
Rengers 4 Montroee 0
St. Johnstone I Hibernian 2
Stirling I East Stirling t
IRISH LBABUI
Ulster Cop
Ards 3 Btllymens I
Coiefalne • Qlentoren 2
Distillery 0 Mngor 2
Olenevon 3 Crusaders 3
Larne 2 Cllftonville •
Llntleld 3 Portedown 1
by tM-o goals at halftime. But
two goals in toe final six min¬
utes, (he sec<md from Allan
Oarke on the stroke of time,
salvaged, a 2-2 draw tor
Leeds. ^
Rangers and Hibernian both
won Saturday* to set up a stiiv
ring decider to Section Four
of the Scottish League Cup in
Glasgow on Wednesday. The
clubs have five points each
from three games.
Rangera won 4-0 at home
against Montrose vhirii would
have ket by a wider margin
but for the brilliance of Dave
Gorman in goal. Derek John¬
stone 2, Sandy Jardine and
Alex Macdonald were the
Raiders setmers.
TRUCK
TRAINING
in Nanaimo
SAFERWAV DRIVER TRAINING
758-3421
COME TO SALMON COUNTRY
REDDER BAY MARINA
Melchosin oil Rocky Point Hd. , 31 , 478-177’
SALE
ENDS SEPT. 4
Our
PiB-Christmas'
YM->that’B what wa said
Pre-Christmas Salel
becauee there won’t be another
one tut 1977.
BRITISH CUSTUM TAILORS
1311 Btenetierd 393-2632
Your recreaUonal
cost you good money.
You should get year ’round
enjoyment from it!
Now you can. At Cedar Acres, a home base for fishing,
hunting . you name, it. This is a now concept in exclusive
campsites. As a tennant in common you are
a partner in ownership of over 20 acres of
beautifully developed recreational property,
and all these facilities are yours.
Children's Playgrourid with Swings,
Seesaws, Climbing Pyramid, Sand
boxes & Tether ball.
* .A Trout Pond.
* Picnic Tables.
* A Communal Barbecue.
* A Water Fountain.
* Washroom Facilities.
* Sani Dump for RV Holding Tanks.
* Ownership limited ,to 50 shares.
‘ Badminton Court
Come see It now, while the RV Centre Ltd. of Viotorla
has vehicles on display. Take the Shawnigan.Lake
Road off the Island Highway A Mill Bay, drive about 1
mile and watch for the sign,
Doft’l pats ip Ait appoitimlly. Ottering Phase No. 1
It $7,900 par iliaia.
PHONE TOLL FREE 743-4042
54 Camping Sites,
with Hydro and Water.'
Grass Tennis Court.
Recreational Hall with Bar Area &
Games Room.
Children's Rayhouse Cabin.
Baseball Diamorxl.
4 Hole Pitch & Putt Golf Course.
Horseshoe Pitch.
Volleyball Court.
(edorlhrBsCanipaub
Exclusive RV camping & recreational facilities.
* *i
SDAlljf COlOni0t Victoria. B.C. Sunday. August 22, 1976 2]
S port diges t
Denver club dubbed
Colorado Rockies
Team Canada itching for real action
DE»'EJl (AP) ~ Th« MVf
Deover frmocblM In the N'a*
tiooai Hockey l^gue has
beea named the Colorado
Rockiee. team ortlciala an¬
nounced Saturday. Sports-
l aater Bud Palmer and oil¬
man Jack Vkkero said laat
week that all legal problems
which may have blocked ef-
hotkey to llenver had been
resolved. Completion of the
negotiations Is scheduled for
this week. Palmer and
Vlckera bad been negotiating
for several weeks to buy
Kansas City Scouts and move
the team to Ilenver. The
Rockies open their >'HL sea-
eon Oct. 5 at home against
MONTREAL (OT> Tegm
Canada has completed 11
days ci workouts and now can
look forward to its first pre-
Canada Cup exhibition games
this week.
The United States, who will
compete in the sLvteam
round-rabin tournament along
with Canada. Chechoslovakia,
the Soviet Union. Finland and
Sweden, will meet Canada
Tuesday and Wednesday in
Quebec.
Scotty Bowman, (Wie of the
four Team Canada coaches,
says the games are coming at
the right time for his team.
"They are ready to play
games now." he said,
■“niey’re ready to play,
there's no question about that.
They want to play.
"In our scrimmages, we try
to keep it so they are not
playing against the same guy.
You change every period. But
1 think these twt> games come
at a good time.
"It’s a change of pace for
them in the next four days.
We have an intra-squad game
Monday, we have the games
Tuesday and Wednesday and
then on Thursday, the rink’s
going to be packed here with
about 15,000. to watch us
scrimmage.
"That’s going to be a good
scrimmage with all the people
here.’’ he added referring to a
special promotion, arranged
t^ a local photo cosnpany,
will permit the fans to watch
Team Canada work out.
The U.S. team, considered a
weak entry In this fall’s tour¬
nament. is still expected to
give the Canadiana a good
test next week.
'T think they’ll be aggres¬
sive," said Bowmian. "I think
they'll play their positions and
play strong defensively."
The coaches have not decid¬
ed which players will dresa
for the games in Quebec Gty.
Team Canada will also have
a pre-toumament game
against Gtechoslovakia in
M<xitrea] Aug. 30 before they
meet Finland in the opening
game of the tournament Sept.
2 in Ottawa.
forts to bring maior-leagne Toronln Maple l.«af».
Canadian wins trap title Second trV
VANDAUA. Ohio (API -
.Susan Nattrass of Hamilton
won both the women’s overall
title and the women's all-
around championship at the
Grand American trapshooting
tournament Saturday.
Miss Nattraas had to defeat
Nila Johnson. Chattaroy,
Wash., in two consecutive
shooto^ to take both crowns,
'fhe women tied for the over¬
all title with 933 of 1£)00 and
for the all-around cham¬
pionship with 378 of 400.
The all-around consists of
the 200 targets in Wednes¬
day’s events. 100 targets in
the Grand American Handi¬
cap and 100 in doubles.
Although he ^id not win a
major event during the tour¬
nament. Gene Sears of K1
Reno. Okla., won the over-all
men’s championship. Sears
broke 971 targets the 1000
that were thrown from Mon¬
day through Saturday to tie
with young Brad I^inger,
Grover Hill, Ohio. In the
shocAoiff. Sears broke 97 of 100
to 96 for his opponent.
England tops team golf
GLENEAGLES. Scotland
(API — England edged the
Rest of the World Saturday to
win the Double Diamcxid
match-play team golf cham¬
pionship.
The teams won two matcheK
each in the head-to-head final
over the fiSlS-yard Gleneagles
course but the holes record of
the English team was two bet¬
ter than the Rest of the
World, which was led ty Gary
Player of South Africa.
Scotland and Europe also
drew. 2-2. but Scotland took
third place with a better holes
reemd.
Player, after two days of
uneven form, came in w'ith a
fine effort and defeated Mar¬
tin Foster. 2 and 1 and Vi¬
cente Fernandez of Argentina
upset Tony Jauklin. 1 14 ).
For England. Neil Coles de¬
feated Simon Hobday of Rho¬
desia. 3 and 2, and Tommy
Horton downed Kaauo Yoahi-
kawa of Japan, 2 and 1.
In the semi-finals England
downed Europe. 3H-Vi and
the Rest of the Wwld beat
Scotland, which eliminated
the United States Friday.
brings title
SACRAMENTO (t'PI) —
Donna Horton captured the
U.S. women’s amateur golf
«-rown for the first time by
beating teenager Marianne
Bretton, i and 1, In the M-hoIe
float Saturday.
The n-year-old Unlvemlty
of Florida graduate rallied
from three down to take the
lead on the 81st hole. A loser
In the final last year. Miss
Horton went two up on the
83rd hole and halved the final
two holes with the IS-year-old
UCLA sophomore.
Dale Shaw of >'ictorla
reached the eights of the tour¬
ney before being eliminated.
Massengale
four stroke
ttnd Snead
up on pack
WETHERSFIELD. Conn,
(AP) — Rik Massengale
blew a two - stroke lead
with a double bogey five on
the 17th hole Saturday and let
J. C. Snead move into a share
of the top spot in the third
round of the $210,000 Greater
Hartford Open golf tour¬
nament.
Snead had a tw<Minder-par
69 in the steamy, muggy heat
and tied Massmgale with a
.‘)4-hole total of 13-under-par
200 on the SSOS-yard Wethers-
Junior
golf
field Country' Cub course
which, as usual, yielded scane
of the lowest scores (k the
year. The leaders' total
matched the lowest three-
lound score of the year.
Massengale. whq had led
the first two rounds with a
pair of 65s. could do no better
than one-under-par 70 in the
third round. The double bc^ey
was the key to the whole
thing. He missed the green to
the left, chipped well beyond
the pin and then three-putted,
missing from about Hi feet
on the second one.
Snead and Massengale
finished the day four strokes
ahead a group of five which
included Lee Trevino. Chi Chi
Rodriguas, A1 Geiberger, Mac
McLendcNi and Bobby Wad-
kins. Trevino carded a 66 Sat¬
urday while Wadkins had a
67. Geiberger and Rodriguez
68s and McLendon a 69.
At 205. eight under par and
five shots back, were Hubert
Green. Barry Jaeckel. John
Schlee. George Archer and
Gay Brewer. Jaeckel shot 66.
Green 67. Archer 6B. Schlee 66
and Brewer 70.
Maarten champ Ray Floyd
had 67-307 and Arnold Palmer
could do no better than a
74-212.
Massengale’f otHy victory
in tlx years on the tour was in !
last season's Tallahassee
C^n. Snead, a winner of sev- |
eral tourneys, was a winner '
in the San Diego Open early I
this year. j
NOTICE
loan
Residents
ef the
City ef
Victeria
AUG.
3L
tJ.S. wins volleyball title
Hot final round
produces final
J. C. SnMd
Mac McLtnCon
Al Gaibargar
Bobtw Wadkins
Laa Travino
Chi Chi Rodriguat
Barry Jaackal
Hubart Grtan
John Schiaa
GaoTM Archar
Gay Brawar
Larry Nelson
Silly Casoar
Tommy Aaron
Wally Armstrong
Art WaJi
Ray Floyd
Leonard Thompson
as-as-ra—aoo
47-444*—300
ae474»—204
70-4441—204
a|49.a7>-304
ae.704a—204
71 4|. C gs
704 * 47 —^
Yugoslav earns net title
HILO. Hawaii (AP) — The
United States women’s team
beat Japan in three straight
games to win the cham-
pioMhip of the Pacific Rim
intematjonal junior volleyball
tournament. The Americans,
who were defending cham¬
pions, fell behind 12-14 tn the
second game, but scored four
sh'aight points to win.
.lapan took second place.
The Republic of (Tiina was
disqualified Thursday after
Japan refused tq play the
team and Canada took the
third-place trophy.
Japan refused to play Tai¬
wan because it did not belong
to the International Volleyball
Federation, a charge denied
by Taiwan but later verified
by the IVf'. Taiwan was al¬
lowed to remain in the toui^
namonl. but its resufts did not
cuunt.
Canada may go with juniors
TORONTO tCP) — Canada
may be represented by a .iuh-
ior all-star team at next
spring’s world hockey cham¬
pionships in Vioina.
Don Johnson, president of
the Canadian Amateui* Hock¬
ey Asaociation. said the jun¬
iors may be used if players
horn the National Hockey
l..cague and World Hockey As¬
sociation are unavailable.
The 1977 tournament will be
the jirst since 1970 for Cana¬
da. which refused to take part
in the intervening years be¬
cause professionals were not
allowed. Canada agreed to re¬
turn to the tournament when
the rules of the International
Ice Hockey Federation were
altered to make the pinfes-
sionais eligible.
"Ideally, the best team
would be pros, but we don’t
know where we stand in that
regard," said J<hnson. "I
don’t think we can afford to
put a team together that
would embarrass us."
Canada's return to the tour¬
nament was a condition laid
down by the IIHF before it
sanctioned next month's Can¬
ada Cup tournament.
McHale quits committee
MONTRiEAL ((3P) — John
McHale. president of Mon¬
treal Expc» of baseball’s Na¬
tional League, said Friday he
has resigned as a member d
the Major League Player Re¬
lations C^mittee.
McHale. a member of the
committee since it was
formed in 19^. said in a
statement he strongly dis¬
agrees with the decision mak¬
ing process of the three nego¬
tiating members—John Ga-
herin, player relations ad¬
viser. Chub Feeney, president
of the National League and
Lee MaePhaii, president of
the American League.
"Several of the National
iA^ague clubs which I repre¬
sented were extremely upset
that they did not have a
chance to have a final review
of the recent contract signed'
with the players association,"
McHale added.
Finland cuts Roadrimner
LASSE MONANEN. a for¬
ward with Phoenix Roadrun-
ners of the World Hockey As-
.vociation, has been cut from
Finland's national hockey
team preparing for nc.xt
mwith’s Canada Cup after re¬
porting in poor physical condi¬
tion . . . Tom Paterson of
Vancouver won the four-event
rombination race in the Cana¬
dian cycling championshliTS
held at the Olympic velo¬
drome in Montreal . . . Dennis
nieed of Toronto Gl>bal8 has
been suspended for three
games for an altercation with
an umpire during a recent
Ontario Fastball League
game and Jim ( rusoe of Burl¬
ington. who was recently sus¬
pended indefinitely after a
hat-throwing incident, has ap¬
pealed the .suspension ... A
crew from St. Catharines has
.scored a two-iengih victory in
th^ 3(X)0-metre race for light¬
weight eight title in the IDOtli
annual U.S. national rowing
championshlpe In Philadel¬
phia . . . Don Batle has I'e-
signed unexpectedly as coach
of San Antonio Thunder of the
North American Soccer
League to resume his former
duties as head coach at Chico
State University in California
. . . David Pearson, winner of
six of eight races at Michigan
International Speedway since
1972, earned the pole position
for today’s' Charppion 400
Grand National stock-car race
with a qualifying speed ol
160.875 miles an hour, almost
thi*ee m.p.h. faster than the
\^record he set In 1974. Buddy
Raker and Calr Yarborough
qualified second and tiiird . . .
U.S. stars Al Feuerbach and
Willie Davenport won the shot
put and llD-metre hurdles at
an international track meet in
Innsbruck, Austria . .. New
York Seta won the first game
of the best-of-five World Team
Tennis championship series
with a 31-23 decision over the
Golden Gaters in Oakland . . .
Ludi^tg Helmrath of Toronto
took the lead three laps from
the finiidi and went on to win
the Trans-Am auto race at
Mosport, Ontario .. .
MANOTICK. Ont. — .\ndre
Noll staged a final-round
charge Saturday to win the
Canadian junior golf cham¬
pionship.
The IS-yearold from Sle.-
Juhe^ie-Vercheres. Q u e . .
carded a two-undeiMtor 70 in
scorching heat on the
66(X)-yard Rideau View Golf
and Country Cub course and
finished with nine-over-par
297.
Nols had been in eighth
place, seven strokes off the
pace, going into the find
round but third-round leader
Yves Trembiay of Tracy.
Que. shot 79 and finished tied
for second at 299 with Doug
l.ecuyer of Edmonton and
Terry Hasimoto Headingiy,
Man.
Leeuyer, who had rounds of , -
74. 75. 75. continued his con- <
sistent play with a 75 while
Haahimoto, who shot 66
Thuraday, came in with a
final round 76.
Jim Duff of Maple Grove.
Que. and Jean Laforce of
Drummtcmdviile, Que, who '
shared the first and second i
round leads but blew to 80 :
Friday, had problems cxi the !
final round. Laforce shot 79 |
for 304 and a share ot alxth |
place while Duff shot 80 for |
305 and a share of eighth |
place. I
Yvan Beauchemin of Tracy. ;
Que.. one of .three firat-round j
leaders with 71. carded 73 Set- j
urday and finished fifth with
300.
B.C. champion Joe Limoli
of Coquitlam and Dick Zokol
of Vancouver topped the B.C.
field, finishing tied lor 20th
with 310s. Zokol had a finat
i-ound of 81 and Limoli shut
79.
Danny Walker of CasUegar
matched Nols' 70 and was the I
only other player to break par I
Saturday but it was his first
good round and he finished
with 312. 1
Also at 312 was Lanny Saw-
diuck of Victoria. He shot 78
and finished one stroke ahead
of BUJ Couper the only other
Victorian to make the cut.
Matthew Shaw of West Par¬
adise. N.S. raptured the juve¬
nile (16 and under) title by
w i n n i n g a sudden-death
playoff with Duff 16. and Erie
Kaufmanis of Aylmer East.
Que. Shaw. 16. tairdied the
second playoff hole for the
win.
Kaufmanis, 15. was runner-
up to Jim Rutledge of Vic¬
toria last year.
TOP M AND TIBS
Andre Nols, Qug.
Oovg Lecuyer. Alts.
Yvss TrsmMsy. Out.
Terry Huhinwto. Men.
Yvsn BMuchgmin. Qvs.
Jesn Lsforcs. Ovm.
Tsd Bishop, Ont.
Jim OuH. Out.
Mprthew Show, N.S.
Eric Koufmonis, C^.
Srion MoOenolo. Quo.
Jsmi* Ktvsnogh, Ont.
Dsn Comsren, Alts.
RoosrI Phillips, Ont.
Nswton Wolpsrt, Qus.
AAorK Sismoossn. Ont.
Oouglss Howsil, Msn.
Curt wordsn. Ont.
Dsn Kodstskv, Ont.
Dick Zokol. Vsncouvsr
Jos Limoli, Cogultlsm
Jssn4.ouit Lomorrs. Out.
Brod Portsr, Ont.
Lsnnv Sswchuk, Vic. 2S4-7I—313
Danny Wsiksr. Ctstlsgr 343-70—313
Bill Coupor. Victoria 23340—313
Blslr Chriitis, N. Von 23S41—3l4
Bill Kino .Vsncouvsr 24341—323
TORONTO (CP) — Mima
Jausovec of Yugoslavia
trounced Australian Lesley
Hunt. 6-2, 6-0, Saturday to win
the wKxnen’s singles title and
$6,000 at the $155,000 Canadian
Open tennis tournament.
It took the 20-year-old Jau¬
sovec. seeded No. 3, less than
an hour to defeat Hunt.
In quarter-final men's
lander Brian Fairlie toppled
veteran Bob Hewitt of South
Africa. 6-3, 3-6, 6-3; Wojtek
F'Ybak of Poland scored a 6-2,
M win over Victor Peoci' of
Paraguay; top-seeded Guiller¬
mo Vilas outlasted Onny
Parun of New Zealand. 6-4.
6-7, 6-2; and fourth>4eeded
Jaime Fillol of Chile topped
unseeded Paolo Bertolucci of
is the
DEADUNE
for
VOTER
Registration
The hundred thousand
dollar rescue operation
. .. and why we’re doing it!
Not long ago, a competing tour operator quite suddenly went
out of business
It could have been a black eye for the whole industry. Instead,
we decided to take a drastic step. We informed all his clients
that vacations would be supplied on an equivalent basis;
deposits would be acknowledged; reservations would be
confirmed.
In short, no customer was to forfeit a paid vacation as a result
of our competitor’s business failure. This operation is costing
us a substantial amount of money. Why are we doing it?
Because we want to preserve the travel industry image in
which we have a large investment.
We have learned in the many years it’s taken*us to become
Western Canada s largest tour operator, that satisfied
customers are priceless. They are the strength of opr business
and come back time and time again to travel on our various
tours.
For your next trip to Reno, Las Vegas, Disneyland,
Lake Tahoe, Hawaii, the Maritimes, or Florida,
call your travel agent.
Ask them about "All-Fun Holidays."
Tell them you like our attitude.
OFnCES AND AFFn.IATES:
VANCOUVER. VICTORIA. CALGARY,
EDMONTON, REGINA, RENO
160% B.C. and ALBERTA OWNED AND OPERATED
REPRESENTING
riiK uom.iKmmK imtoiks family.
REGISTERED
You Won’t
Be
Qualified
to Vote
in
Municipal
Elections
in
November
★
CHECK
IT
N6W
at the City
Clerk’s
Office
CITY HALL
385-5711
local 208
★
^ oic si
28 Coloni0l Victoria, 6.C., Sunday, Aujust 22, 1976
With DOROTHY FRASER
Stunning European ImporU . . .
When it comes to clothes. , . there's precious little that's real¬
ly exclusive nowadays. . . at any price. . . But definitely nowhere
else in Victoria will you find a duplicate of the very beautiful In¬
dian print chiffon dinner dress by Vali„ of Paris, which we ad-
mired,at Gibson’s this week! ... A brilliant orange and pink print-
on a black background . . . it's a two-piece style with very fitted
bodice and full sleeves, and has its own chiffon square scarf. ..
One only, in a size 10 . . . and a similar style in a brilliant blue
print on black is a 12. . . Similarly exclusive is an exciting French
periume bv this same designer, vali.. . Bottles in quarter, half.
andOn^ttneesiaes nestle in the heart of a crystaU-lear Incite cube
which can later be used to enclose perhaps a flower ... for a very
decorative ornament... A mere whiff of this new Vali fragrance
will waft you into heaven! ... Back to fashions ... we saw
another dinner dress In a very fine wool print by Mr. John
Couturier of Italy ... A beige-grey mottlfd print cut on Elmpire
lines with soft skirt... If you wear a size 14 or 16. you'll find this
very elegant and sylph-making! ... A new restaurant dress in a
cream and camel olurred print is simplicity itself... Soft midi
skirt fitted over the hips, envelope neck and slim sleeves. .. Look
closely and you'll discover a lovely sleek tiger on the skirt front
.. . enough in itsdf to provide a fascinating topic of conversation!
. . . Same delightful style in a brilliant blue with grey and brown,
at . . . Gibson’s, 7W View St., 384-5913.
You can build a T-strap shoe wardrobe about as extensive as
your collection of T-shirts!
Treasures of all sorts at the Handloom .. .
Wondered what all the excitement was about when we noticed
a group of out-of-towners huddled around the Kadian Craft wood
carvings in the Handloom the other day .. . Discovered the carv¬
ings are of bears ... one with a fish in its mouth ... another
lumbering along in its ursine way . .. and a third ... so beautiful¬
ly done tMt every hair stands out. . . standing on a rocky base. . .
Each of these is a collector's item! ... We noticed some sturdy
. . . and very chic . .. catalogne tote bags which we thought would
be perfect for school and college because they're so sturdy and
hard-wearing, and will carry botws along with a girl's personal im-
C menta ... An outside pocket takes care of the latter . .
dioom has a good supply of Cottage Craft kits. . . Hand-woven
skirt length wlui enough matching yam for a sweater . .
Something like 20 colors and two different weights . Some
beautiful hand-knit sweaters in this same Cottage Craft yam,
made especially to Handloom s order ... Nice and easy for gift¬
mailing are the hand-woven pillow covers . . . Interesting tex¬
tures, m colors to suit most decors . . . Also complete made-up
woven pillows .. . When you're in Handloom don't fall to look at
their batik English leather handbags ... Green, blue or brown
with different color accents .. . zipped across the top, with
shoulder strap ... And if you're a miniature collector . . .
Handloom has some delightful miniature jars and vases... not to
mention a whole menagerie of hand-blown glass animals! .. .
Haadloom. C8 Trounce Alley, 384-1611, and Empress Hotel, 384-
1618.
Labor Day weekend
Oregon Open Comes Next
Paul Coxe is a leading amateur
Ry RAY KERR
Cokonist Chtss Writtr
Things may be deathly
quiet on the B.C. Chew Fed¬
eration front, but when it
comes to Pacific Northwest
obese as a whole, there's
plenty tn do.
I hear that a number of
players from B.C. is getting
ready for the first big tour¬
nament of the new season, the
Oregon Open near Portland
during the Labor Day week¬
end. Sept. 4-6.
Organized by the brilliant
Oregon TD Clay Kelleher. the
six-round, $1,750 guaranteed-
prize event will be ^ay’ed at
Mount Hood Oommunity Cbl-
in Gresham, only U
miles east of Portland city
. centre. There will be two
rounds on each of the' three
Trtaying days, with the rounds
at 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. on the
final day to allow early depar¬
ture for out-of-towners.
Entry fM at the site is $18
plus USCF membership and
there are excellent in
all sections. Registration at
the site runs 8:30-10 a.m.,
Sept. 4. a Saturday.
Certainly an. exc^ent event
to c^n the season in the
Northwests
While on the subject of
Northwest tournaments, B.C.
Checkmate
players should start making
plan.s now for the huge
Northwest Christmas
Congress in Seattle.
This fabulous holiday chess
jamboree i.s scheduled for
Dec. 27-28. and is being or¬
ganized by Rc^rt Karch of
Seattle, who together with
Clay Kedleher, is the best TD
in the Northwest.
Now this ev'ent. tailor-made
for such B.C. amateurs as
Paul Ooxe of Vancouver,
Richard Jeanpierre of Vic¬
toria and Gerry Fbrbes of
Port Albemi. to just mentinn
a few. has got a little bit for
everybody.
It has an invitMiorB] pre¬
mier section, wluh will be
strictly up Ip Karch and will
feature the best from the
Nordiwest.
It then has an Amateur sec¬
tion, ter those rated 1800-2099:
Booster. ter ratings of
1500-1799, and Progre ss ive,
from 1499 wd all the way
down to lairated. In each sec¬
tion, there are prizes of $400,
$150. $100 and $50.
However, there's also the
19 7 6 Northwest Students
Chess Cbamponship open to
ALL Northwest schools, with
a student team speed event on
Dec. 28. junior high school
championship (open to all
those in Grade 9 or belowl
Dec. 29. and elementary
schools tournament (Grade 6
or lower) also Dec. 29.
Sounds like a perfect event
for the many Greater Victoria
schools wiA excellent pro¬
grams, and I suggest their
sponsors write as early as
possiUe ter details to Robert
Karch, P.O. Box 88317. Tukwi-
la Branch. Seattle. Welling¬
ton 96188, U.S. Same goes ter
all others interested in play¬
ing and obtaining all the ptr-
iculara.
Meanwhile, all chess
(layers are getting their
books ready to study for the
coming season.
Among the best put out any¬
where are those by Dover
Publications, and in particu¬
lar a number I have received
recently.
The book fiOO Master Games
by Tartakower has to be ree-
“DoeildB” jacket goei with everything ...
We'd have sworn it was the finest of doeskin . . . that Paul <
Rogers tucked shirt jacket they showed us at Imparts n' Imports
last Monday . . . and accustomed as we are to seeing things which ;
are other than they seem ... we found it hard to brieve this lux- :
urious stuff is really a man-made fabric! ... We love the way it's !
cut. . . and its lively chocolate brown shade has a chameleon-like
property in that it seems to blend with everything regardless of
color! . .. For instance, there are Kinlock Anderson pure wool
skirts from Scotland which might have been made especially for i
this jacket ... to form a smart, casual suit . .. One style in a ,
brown check tweed with a touch of rust... cut straight with in¬
verted front pleat... the other a flared skirt in brown and rust
check . .. and believe it or not, this same skirt in gold black
looks eoually at home with the brown jacket! ... These really
smart skirts are priced from 846 to 875 ... As for the jacket.. .
fully lined, and washable ... it's tagged at 8100 ... and we've a
hunch could well prove to be the best 8100 you've ever spent! .. .
We bear that some new pants and skirts are due in any day now
. . . made from a new material called “Charoere" ... a
cashmere-textured blend which . . . who knows? ... might fotd us
into thinking they’re cashmere! . .. Pants will sell for 866 ..
Skirts. 160 ... 111080 sound great for wearing with blouses and
sweaters ... Impacts ’n’ Imporu, 8 Cesteinial Square, 388-7823.
STAMP PACKET
Magazine prospects good
CHRIS WOOTTON
prevloufly at the Cutting Bench
haa raturned from Europe end
Is now et
MR. VZ
ki NOOTKA COURT
3U-M21
By LICSI.il! DREW
Colonitt StsH
Apart from pbUatelic soci¬
ety publications, stamp maga¬
zines In Canada haven't been
noted for being longJived.
This .shoidd surprise no one,
considering the perils of only
mre small production aspect
the proofreading of the
inrrg columns of price quota¬
tions in the ads.
Now. however. Canadian
Stamp Nesvs is on'the market,
a t^loid published every
other week at 1567 Sedles-
,U.S. stars and socialites are going' crazy over "attic
treasures " in the shape of old clothes of the 20's, 30’s and 40’s.
I Eafy walldig hi Itallai Bandolinot ...
U you'd like a really good imported walking shoe ... in a
medium price range... we suggest you pay an early visit to Mun-
; day's and try on some of their newly-arrived Bandcdino shoes from
: Italy... These are well-fitting, softly pliable shoes that will make
your walking easy and comfortable ... as well as looking smart
!and well-bred, and complementing your pant suits and casual
' wear to perfection! ... AU the patterns are new this year ..
'.There's a nice little loafer called “Incanto” ... in navy or brown
calf with leather sole and low stacked heel... priced at 830 ...
-Another loafer has the same name .for some reason, but it’s a
! wedge with crepe sole, and comes in rust or brown suede, at 828
-. . . ’"nmo,” in black or brown calf, has a moccasin vamp and
'subtly higher stacked heel... Its intriwing Gucci-type trim has
■ a bny Bandolino nameplate!... 833. . .For a little dressier walk¬
ing woe, try "Talco "... Tan or navy calf with covered heel and
simple leather trim, priced at 833 ... "Ouca" is an interesting
double T-strap with higher stack heel and the new semi-wedge
crepe sole... 832 . .. Finally, "Insegna "... Dark brown suede
... and brown, beige or navy leather . .. with high, stacked heel
... Just 830 for this one.. . Remember when navy used to be con¬
sidered strictly a spring shade? No longer true . . . It's now one of
the basics, and is a popular fall color! . .. Munday'i, 1203 Douglas
-St., 383-2211.
-Smart fathions to head lato fall ...
How they manage it we'll never really know but every suc-
■ cessive season in all the years we've been writing this column . ..
Miss Frith's have always seemed to come up the "firstest with the
: mostest!"... Like now. . . Fall fashions are arriving so thick and
? fast it’ll take your breath away ..'. and when we went browsing
- around this week we saw such a variety of absolutely smashing
- fashions that we really couldn't settle on any one thing to feature!
... While dresses and skirts are strong . . pant suits are still
very much to the fore ... We especially like those by Kendall. .
a new supplier to Miss Frith's this year . . . They re pure wool
- knits in three and four-piece styles ... And what's more, the styl¬
ing is really good .. . sunple and well-cut, but interesting in treat¬
ment .. . like the skirt-pant-jacket-vest suit. . . especially smart
in black, with black and white striped vest . . . Malber Inter¬
national makes some smart suits too .. . One with a brown and
'..ybone knit turtleneck pullover with a tweedy look, has a wrap
sweater .. . It's nice to see so many doubleknit suits to choose
from! ... If you’re a very tailored type you may like the smart
suit in men's suiting material . . . Lots of knit dresses with ex¬
citing touches ... A number of "fun ” fur coats which really don't
try to fool you (though there's a "mink" which comes close to it! I
... but are fun to wear on occasion ... and are certainly cozy to
snuggle into! . . . Miss Frith Fashions. 1616 Douglas St., 383-7181.
REGISTER NOW
For Strotch and Sew
SEWING CLASSES
^ Enroll Now. ClasiM Start:
BASIC I
start* Mon., Aug. 30, 1-3 or M p.m., Tuai., At>g. 31, 1'3or 7*
9 p m.. Wad., Sapt. 1, 9-11 or 7-9 p.m. SOA
I LESSONS. aU
ADVANCED BASIC • (Basic • Graduates Only)
start* AAon., Sept. 20, 7-9'p.m. or Wed., Sept. 22,1-3 p m. IOC
t LESSONS.k.
MEN'S PANTS \
Start* Tue*., Sapt. 1A 9-11 a.rra or 7-9 p.m. SZ
2LESSONS . \ . W
MEN'S TAILORED JACKET *
Start* Tuet., Sept. 21 1-3 p.m. or 7-9 p.m. S1 0
4 LESSONS. 14
LINGERIE
Start* Thur*., Sept. 23. 1-3 p.m. $10
5 LESSONS. 14
SPECIALTY CLASS
LONDON PANTS
Sat., Sapl. 119:30-11:30 S^
1 LESSON../.. W
Naw Fall Fabrics Arriving Dally
COME IN AND SEE OUR TREMENDOUS SELECTION
OF FABRICS — III IrnNi - first Ruilty
We sell Bernina Sewing Machines and our Bernina conaultant la
in our store every Wed., 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. or by appointment.
Stretch & Sew Leaeona are Included with each Bernina
purchaae. If you are in need of a Sewing Machine, aee ua when
you enroll for claaaea Let ua help you aelect a machine to suit
your needs. We also have a new Omega Machine Special $190
Flattering swimwear for maitectomy patients . . .
Just because you may have had a mastectomy don't think
you'll never again be able to wear a smart, eye.eatching bathing
suit ... or look as alluring as you ever did in your life! .
Surgical Supplies Ltd. has just received some truly exciting
swimwear designed for mastectomy patients . . but which we
ourself would be delighted to own and wear! There's a flatter¬
ing suit by Airway ... a real maillot style. . which you can wear
several different ways . . . While it's built up in the front, and the
neckline closes with a button ... it opens up to a V-llne . Strajri
are convertible in that they can be tied in a halter. criss-crossM
over the back, or worn parallel . . as the spirit moves you .
Smart contemporary prints in blue and lime, or brown and cream
... or in a rich plain navy . . . Other suits are from Camp . One
with buiR-up shoulders, low back, and separate panties ... in a
gay print . . . Another all-in.one with little flared skirt open
back tied with halter. . . Red with white flowers, or black with red
andfuchsia ■ A smart navy suit has little sleeves and a pantie at¬
tached to a long underbodice, which also holds the bra . . . Another
ingenious suit has drawstrings down the front and over the
shoulders so it can be changed about or narrowed as the situation
dictates . . . Several other styles too. . . subtly cut to conceal your
secret yet not look the part! . . . Just a limited number of these
swimsuits so don't delay seeing them at .. . Surgical Suppliea
Ltd., 1612 Broad St., 364:7166. a/vmimimi
k
2641 EBTEVAN AVE.
FABRIC CCNTBR
992-9622
comb Drive. Mississauga,
Ont. L4X 1M5, with Don
Thomas as publisher, a lively
editorial content, ads from
dealers right across the
couTTtry, and a compatible
section at (he end of each
issue dealing with aijUgues.
Single copies sell for 50 cents,
and subecriptlon rates are $6
for one year, Sll for two
years and $15 ter three years.
Everything points to this
magazine having a good, long
run.
A puhtisher'a footriote on a
press release accompanying
the 1977 Lymwi’s Canada
British North America Post¬
age Stamp Retail Catalogue,
just puMished. prepared me
ter some of the eyebrow- •
raisers the catalogue corw
tains. “We feel toe 1977
Lyman retail prices reflect as
accurate a barometer as hu¬
manely r*oi«ible to offer a1
this time during this h^tic
j period in the stamp maricet,”
he wrote.
Sure enough. The scarce
five-cent carmine rose post¬
age due J32. which Scott
quotes at $1.25 used and un¬
used. Jias shot up from $4 to
$20 either used or unused in
Lyman’s. Each of the four
starry in last year's coastal
ships set is up to ^ cents
unused frwn 14 cwts. TTie
SOK'ent Suzor-Cote of 1969 goes
up to $2.50 from $1.50 unused.
Lyman’s is the dealers'
handbook. This latest edition
is $1.75 or $2.20 by first-dass
mail from Robert W. Lyman,
Box 23, Station V, Tewonto,
M6R pA4
Another new publication is
a Catajogue xit British Local
Stamps^ issued in England
and compiled and edited by
i Gerald Rosen.^ The bcK^cIet
I also lists British philatelic
1 souvenir sheets among otoor
! sidelines. According to the
; American distributor. H. L.
j Lindquist- Publications Inc.,
: 153 Waverly Place. New
' York, toe price is S4.50 posl-
; paid in the U.S.: orders from
outside the U.S. mu.si include
! $1 for postage.
New pre-stamperi envelopes
j and postcards, stamp booklets
and stamp rolls will be avail-
I able on Sept- L the day firsl-
} class domestic postage rates
I go up in Canada.
I TTie new envelopes and
* postcards in a 10-cenl denomi-
(ilKARD-PEKREUAlX DIGITAL PART/
Ihe
eui
^,,dce
oftme
Bo/d« Innovative lookt that aet netr
atandarda of atyling excellence
This hi^-perfwmance solid-state watch is designed for your
wrist by Girard-Perregaux, with its streamlUiaa case, sloped
and recessed readout screen and matching bracelet.
The UP LED makes an indisputably original contribution to
the art of time. And an eminently practical one too: press the
right-hand button and you read the hours and minutes, the day
and the date, and then the seconds—at a glance!
All the prestige, accuracy and dependability of today's ad¬
vanced tlmekeepii^ technology, backed by the experience
and guarantee of the pioneers of high quality quartz watches:
Girard-Perregaux of Switzerland.
Reg. NM MtcralsB 426.06
Ref. an Stalileu 8Uel 666.66
Ref. azi Relief GeM 666.66
exclofively
de Goutiere
Jieicpilers Ltd.
2934 ESTEVAN AVENUE
VICTORIA. B.C.
TelephMe $98-3224
ommended highly because the o
selection of toe 500 games is
out of this world arid players
of all descriptions can gain a ■
tremendous advantage over
their opponents by being fa¬
miliar with this work.
A supplementary wtwk lo
this one is 100 Master Games
by Tartakower. which is just
as good as the larger work
but is considerably smaller
and not nearly as expensive
(though the large work is
quite a bargain at its $6 listed
price)-. «
Both hooks hare to be high¬
ly recommended becau^ they
take one through toe apec-
trum of early wicounters
torougji the days of Alekhine
and Euwe and on to modem
warriors of toe ilk of Botvin-
nik. Smyslov and the • late
Paul Keres.
Also received from the fan¬
tastic Dover library were
such fabulous wcaics as Paul
Keres Beat Games, Znosko-
Boro\-sky*s End Games, Soviet
Scheot of Chess by Kotov.
Sutherland’s Modem End-
Game Studies. Reshevsky's
Best Games and My Best
Games by Snij-slov.
I can’t say enough about all
these works, and toey should
all be available through your
favorite Vancouver Island
bookstores, if not, write di¬
rectly to Dover Publications.
180 Varick Street, New York.
10014, U.S.
As for Games of the Week,
two excellent samples from
recent toumements.
In the hrst one, David Bron-
stem polishes off Julio Kaplan
of Puertx) Rico, hepling the
Soviet ace tie for first in toe
leist Hastings Premier event.
He .shared the hbnors with
Vlastimil Hort of Czfechoslova-
..kia and Wolfgang lAtlmann of
East Germany.
The other game is a big
upset from one of the Europe¬
an zonal tournaments, with
Fezir Hazai of Tuikey, a real
unknowTi. clipping grand¬
master Lothar Shmidt of West
Germany. The game got toe
brilliancy prize.
GRANDDAUGHTERS, of Robert Service, ArmeUe
Davies and her sister Anne from Monte Cario,
autograph blowup of new Canadian stamp honor-
ing jBard of Yukon in Dau*son City. The si^rs had
never seen the Yukon made famous by their grand¬
father. Yukon Commissioner Art Pea^n and Post¬
master-General Bryfx Mackasey watched auto¬
graphing in front of historic Dawson City post office.
.The sisters were in Victoria on Aug. 11 and visits
Canadian Imperial Bank of Comnierce branch at
Government and Fort Street where Service worked
before going north to fame and fortune.
nation will have the Sarnie de¬
sign as that on the current
sbf-cent and eight-cent pre¬
stamped stationery.
Fifty-<ent booklets will be
available, each containing
four of the new lO-cent defini¬
tive bearing the Queen’s por¬
trait. four of the twTKrent de¬
finitives with the Laurier por¬
trait. and two of toe one-cent
John A. Macdonald definitis'es.
Stamp rolls of 100 10-cent
stamps will also be issued.
Present supplies of sta-
ticnery in toe six-cent denomi¬
nation. and booklets and rolls
emtainirtg eighl-cent defini¬
tives, will officially be off sale
on the new issue date, but
will continue tn be available
as philatelic items until Sept.
1, 1977 or until supplies run
out.
Explosion rocks
press building
RIO DE JANEIRO (UPT) —
A bomb police said was plant¬
ed by an anti-communist fac¬
tion exploded Tlujrsday in the
offices of the Brazilian Press
.Association. Police said the
bomb injured ne one and few
people were in the crfficcs
wtien the bomb exploded in A
]av&tory.
★ ★
★
Kaplan
Brnnstcin
White
Black
1 P-K4
P.K3
2 p.Q4
P.Q4
3 N-QB3
N-KB3
4 B-KNS
PxP
5 NxP
B.K2
6 BxN
PxB
7 N-KB3
N-Q2
8 Q-Q2
P-QB4
9 P-Qn
P.B4
10 PxKP
PxN
11 PxNch
QxP
12 Q-B3
0-0
13 N-Q2
Q-B4
14 O-GO
QxP
15 NxP
Q-B5ch
16
B-N5
17 R-Kl
B-N4
18 B-Q3
QR-Kl
19 RK-KBl
Q-K6
20 P.KR3
B-K7
21 R.B5
B-R3
22 BxB
QxQ
23 PxQ
RxB
24 R-Q5
RxN
25 RxR
RtQI
26 R-R-Ql
R-B5
27 reeigns
Hazat
Schmidt
White
Black
1 P-K4
N-KB3
2 N-QB3
P.Q4
3 P-K5
KN-Q2
4 P-Q4
P-K3
5 P-B4
P-QB4
6 N-B3
N-QB3
7 B-K3
PxP
8 KNxP
NxN
9 BxN
N-Nl
10 Q-Q2
N-B3
11 0-0-0
NxB
12 QxN
B-Q2
13 P-B5
Q-N4ch
14 K-Nl
QxBP
15 B-Q3
Q-N4
16 KR-Bl
B-K2
17 NxP
PxN
18 QxQP
0-00
19 B-R6
PxB
20 Q-R8ch
K-B2
21 QxPeh
K-Bi
22 R-Q6
QxKP
23 R-QN6
R-Q-Kl
24 R-Ql
B-Q3
25 R-I^8ch
BxR
26 QxB/7 mate
MALVERN and WESTERHAM
SCHOOL
(FoundMl 1923) (17SS Rockland)
RESIOENTIAL ANO DAY SCHOOL, GRADES 9-12
BRITISH COLUMBIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
CURRICULUM IN ARTS, SCIENCES, LANGUAGES,
MUSIC AND DRAMA
LIMITED VACANCIES
APPLY MRS. 8EALY 598-7631
4
4
>
^ilas
ess
Yard
32
Wiilg CVloniat Victoria, B.C., Sunday, August 22, 1976
Dan MacAdam, 91, of l^ctoiia, stOl finds time for
oooaoional game of cheas and this time his opponent
is Victoria organizer and leading woman ch^ star
Lynn Stringer. At MacAdam's elbow is special
plaque presented by Charles Birch of Victoria, treas¬
urer of the Chess Foundation of (hnada, for Mao
Adam’s 40 years of work in national chess. He was
chairman of foundation, publisher of first yearbot^
and organizer of many other activities.
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for fall fashions that make ft
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Swaatshlrt
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The cozy choice for "warm-
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Easy-care, tool Full bolt, 56-
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_/
Herbs magicians
of culinary world
A sentimental journey
VAMCOUVEP
• 2eOOQranvllltAl1thA«».
• llthAArMus
• 341 Lonedete, North Vancouver (at $rd
Moil- Sel MO-t; Thurs, FrI tJOwl
• 4^ North Rd. (Cariboo Centra)
Mem Tuaes Set Wad. Frt
tURRIY
• 10653 King Qeorge Hwy.
VICTORIA
• 1585 Hillside Avt.
Men-FH trlO-l; Sel tiSO-d
PRINCE QEOlftf
• Pine Centre Shopping Mall
By MDmiE BERNABDINO
LOS ANGELES — Heits
ere feecinatiiie magidans of
the culinary world. Can one
find any betto* flavor en*
hancer than a touch of^thyme
In clam chowder or gumbo?
And what flavor can match a
pinch of tarragon with flah?
Sage, dill, chervil or mar*
Jwam? All other herbs, of
course.
By RtHIERT MUSEL
LONDON. (UPn — ‘The
last tiiue 1 stood here," said
Louis Alter, "was 50 years
ago."
He was in the courtyard of
St. James Palace lot^cing up
at the window's of what once
was the apartment of the
Prince of Wales, long before
Crown Prince Edward met his
American divorcee and died
in seU*€xile In France as the
Duke of Windsor.
"The prince liked to jHay
the drums, you know," said
Alter. “He used to ask me to
come along and play the
piano to his beat. The w'ln*
dows look empty now but they
were always Mazing with
lights in those days. They are
all gone, aren't they? The
prince and all his beautiffS
pec^le."
This is a sentimental jouiv
ney for Alter, 74, who toured
Britain in 1923, 1924 and 1926
as • accompanist to the
greatest singer of her time,
Nora Bayes. be<bre he w'ent
on to fame himself as a song*
writer.
He composed the enduring
symphonic jazz classic Man¬
hattan Serenade at the re¬
quest of Paul Whiteman and a
string of hits for Fraidc Sina-
ira, Louis ArmstitMig, Bing
Crosby, Bea UUie, Joan
Crawford. T^nie Brice.
Somehow, although his cd*
reer really started here and
he always planned to come
back, the decades slipped by.
Df. Hugh W. Lamont
Announces the opening of his pnctice of
ORTHODONTICS
I «
No. 302-1640 Oak Bay Avenue, Victoria
Telephone 595-4341
‘‘Is Kim Manchester
around?" be asked. "He was
a great friertd of mine."
The Duke of Manchester, he
was told, now lives in Kmya.
■T would have liked to have
seen Noel Coward. He used to
• beg me to get him an appoint¬
ment with Ncnti so he could
play her his songs. I liked him
and especially the way he
wrote so I arranf^ the mee¬
ting and that was his start as
a songwritw."
'T’ve always been wtJric-
ing." be said. ‘Tve just
finished the music for Budd
Schulbog’s dramatization ot
The Disenchanted by F. Soott
ntzgerald."
In May, Alter was elected
to the Songwriters Hall of
Fame, and recalling this
brought forth a flood of mem¬
ories: Playing jazz with violin
virtuoso Jascha Heifetz, wrrit-
ing My Kind of Love f<»' the
audition that won Bing Qrosby
his first film contract. Pres¬
ident Franklin D. Roosevelt
confiding that Home on the
Range wan’t his favorite scmg
— it was Alter's Twilight on
the TVail.
CLIFFSIDE SCHOOL
Shawnigan Laka,
Vanoouvar laland, B.C.
An Independant boarding
school for boys Grades III to IX
offering a complete education
liKludIng a ■ special class for
boys with specific learning dis¬
abilities.
for further information and
proipectua please write to the
neadmailer of phone (604) 743-
9424 or 743-5174.
SALE ENDS
SATURDAY
AUG. 28
BSck-to-School
NOTIONS
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• Bead Headpins
• Hand Sewing Needles
• Wristband PTncuahlon
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fall. Solids and fancies In full
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Tarrific colour selection in
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poly/cotton blend. Great for
back-to-school wardrobingl
Full bolt, 45" wide.
Bruahod
Cotton Denim
Vaiua to 4.00
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Man-Mada
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Vaiuaa to 12.00
788
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Contemporary
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Soft, easy-care and comfbr.
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LOADS OF FREE
PARKING
In his eteriial search for ad¬
ventures in food, it did not
take men lor^ to discover fo¬
liage with fragrant end sa-
vocy attributes that tickled
his palate. In both ancient
and modem literature, the
names and lore of herbs are
recorded. Fragrant plants like
mint, rue and cumin are mav
tioned in the Bible. Sweet
heihe were chewed by Cosaiv*
ova to perfume his breath. In
the Middle Ages, monks cul¬
tivated lovely gardens of culi¬
nary herbs, and today one
reads ot beautiful ideas for
herbal landscaping and the
growing of heite indooia and
oat
given heibs this virtue
of imparting flavor and
aroma to dishes? The magical
properties lie in the essential
oils found in the seeds or fo¬
liage. These aromattc Mis are
8 Mid)le and volatilized by heat
so they permeate foods.
So vast is the world of herbs
and spices that many plants
and their uses still remain a
mystery. Beginning herbal
cooks will find it Is wise to
equip themselves Initially
with just a handful of the
more popular herbs.
'The freshherb enthusiast
Mmild engage in using a few
herbs srt dw start. Some of
the simple basic herbs like
cldvee, diH, basil, sage, tar^
ragon and parsley will grow
fairiy easily in the garden or
patio aa well as on a kitchen
window sill," says Qara Ry-
giol, herb garden chairman at
the Loa Angeles County Ar¬
boretum. She grew up in Po¬
land with fresh herbs avail¬
able in the family garden and
likes to use fresh heibe in
cooking. Tmly, ar^^one who
has tasted the dlAerence in
dishes seasoned with fresh
heri>8 compared to those sea¬
soned with dried herbs will
agree that fresh seasonings
offer a finer and more delica¬
te flavor.
Once you begin growing
herbs in your garden or in
containers indoors. It is most
rewaidlng to be able to use
the seeds or leaves in west
and casserole dishes, soupa,
salads or flavorful teas.
Althou^ fresh'-herb
harvests for instant use ore
always desirable, ’ drying
herbs at home for winter use
and for making fragrant pot¬
pourris and sachets also is
beneficial. To substitute dried
herbs for fresh, use one-half
teaspoon crushed <fried heibs
for every tablespoon of fresh.
This pr opor ti on depends on
the age of the dried herbs, as
the flavor and aroma quickly
deteriorate dwing storage.
ZMed herbs have a one-year
shelf life for maximum qucUi-
ty. ^fthen using them, rub the
leaves to a .dust to release
flavor.
Dlscoivering the best use of
halts aqd q>tcea in cooking
can be achieved by testing
and tasting. "As a member of
the Hevb Society of America,
I share new recipes with
other members who do lika-
wise," says Mrs. RygiM. "My
best tossed green salski mixes
flavorfi^ fresh heihal foliage
and flowers like lovage, dill,
basil, chives, borage and sage
Diamod anniversary
Ixntg-time residents of Banff who retired to Victoria
in ife, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Oxborough, of 217-3220
(^dra, celebrated diamond wedding anniversary
«riier this month. E3ghty friends and relatives con¬
gratulated them at gatxien party at the hone of
their son-in-law and daughter in Central Saanich.
Rev. John Travis propo^ toast to couple, who
were married in Mtmchestef, England.
flowers and nasturtium flow¬
ers if in season."
Alma Pontello, another ac¬
tive member of the Herb Soci¬
ety of America who also tends
the one-acre hert> gstxxlen at
the Artxvetum, finds heihal
cooking a i^easant challenge.
She is an expert on herbal
drinks like aromatic teas Tuid
mixed beverages. One ot her
latest concoctions is an hors
d'oeuvre made with biimet, a
femllke herb that has a deli¬
cate odor and flavor resem¬
bling that of the cucuntoer.
The herb makes a good fla¬
vored butter and is excellent
in soups, salads and tea. Bur¬
net may be an herb to keep in
mind if one is allergic to cu-
'cumberi.
When cooking with heihs. It
is well to remember that too
strong a spicing can min a
dish. Learn to harmonize ttie
arcmiatic flavors of one or two
herbs in the course ot a meal
and avoid using too much ot
any herb or you'll lose the
true flavor of the meat or
Vegetable.
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Thelslarider
Doily Colonist Mogozine
Victoria, B.C., Sunday, August 22, 1976
« '• ' ' ’^K ^ ^ -V ■. ^ 'j^
' '»!L^ 4^
Er'-rrr*.-, •
One ot the spectacular
•>: s4
sights seen by hikers along
the West Coast Trail is
Tsusiat Falls, which
cascades onto the beach.
Photo by Ian Smith.
?,-. «;'>S«.''
a
/
Speeches from the Past
The Islander sure gels
around; this corner gels letters
from just about everywhere on
the face of this old globe, in¬
cluding South Africa.
Comes a letter from Victoria bom Leslie Ma-
qtiimey of Los Angeles, nephew of the late B. C.
Mrholas. long-time editor of the Victoria Times,
who died at bis editorial desk In the old Times
building at Fort and Broad 40 years ago.
Mr. Maqhinney writes; “lliraugh courtesy of
Owen Fowler, f get to see moat of your stuff in The
Islander and, needless to say. It brings back
memories, and enables me to wallow in nostalgia
from time to time.
"I only wish I could recall more clearly The
Times routes my brother Ralph and I jointly car¬
ried.
“One mite began at the October ManskaiB. at
Fort and Cook, where my Unde Ben and Ids mother
lived. He called her Tiny.
“At the same intersection was Aaronson's drug
store, and on another comer the establishment of
James Adam, who billed himself ‘the particular
grocer.’
* ♦ ★
“Oddly enough, the only two homes on that
route which 1 remember were those of Mr. and
Mrs. F^rcy Raymond-son, Robin, and dau^teis
Aileen (on whom I had a terrible crusbl and Mar¬
jorie: the second home I remember being that of
the GoUisons, whose son was a schooimate of mine.
‘ 'Our other route was on the other side pf town.
It began at the comer of Gladstone and Femwood,
where the Rennie and Taylor bakery was.
“It was a weiccme haven on coli rainy ni^ts.
and occasionally the benevolent Mr. Rennie would
slip us a couple of the bakery's famous ‘rock’
cookies.
“I would have given a great deal to have at¬
tended the recent lOOth birthday reunion at Victoria
High, although I'm afraid very few of my old clas¬
smates would have been around — and certainly
none of my teachers.
“Of the latter I vividly re m ember my liome
room' teacher — Vera Adms."
(Here let me butt in to say Vera Adams is very
much around — married and living in Montreal.
(I met her two years ago at an Adams family
reunion, in honor of her distinguished first cousin,
Julius Adanns Stratton, of Boston, retired president
of the famed Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
(Her sister, Isla, of Victoria, and nephews and
nieces were present also —'among them Clifford
Adams. Rear-Admiral Ken Adams, Don Adams,
Mrs. Eldward F. Fox and Mrs. Frank Norton.
(It was a wonderful clam-bake, as the old say¬
ing would have It.)
★ ★ *
^ Mr. Maquinney's letter continues; "My French
teacher was Miss McCuilough; an athletic mind guy
named Cook tried to teach me algebra, and other
teachers were Harry Smith, the McLeod sisters,
Mr. Comet, ‘Buck’ Yeo, and my cousin. Ira
Dilsrorth, was around, too.
’’But my clearest memories of those days are
of Sprott-Shaw school, where I took up wireless
telegraphy under A. P. Hill, and the watchful eye of
Jim B^tty.
“Othey pictures slither through my mind — The
Thnnes dt^room, with city editor T. Harry Wilson,
Dick Freeman, Tom Merriman, Bill Henderson, t
Harry and Nancy Hodges, the one and only
Cornelius Francis Moriarty, and. of course. Uncle
Ben; and Dave Porter ran the elevator.
“As kkh, Ralph and I were always ttatBed piifi
when Uncle Ben would decide to take us to a movie
matinee, but it nearly always proved to be a hectic
afternoon — for tbO simple reason that Uncle Ben
Sunday, August 22, llTt
PAGE 2—The Dally Colonist
couldn't sit still for very long, became bored with
the movie, and would yank us out of, say, the
Romano, and we would then enter the Columbia, or
perhaps the Dominion or some other theatres,
where the same brief viewing of the proceedings
would occur.
“I have seen afternoons, when, under Uncle
Ben's benign guidance, we would see a few scenes
of half a dozen different movies, and never did find
out how any of’emcameout—be was an impulsive
guy
“They were great days. And. after going to sea
as a radio operator-purser for a few years, then into
radio broadcaaling, I ultimately wotnd up fOBowing
in Uncle Ben's footsteps as a reporter and editor in
the United States.
OLD HOMES AND FAMILIES
By James K. Nesbitt
"In his final 20-odd years my father. Frank,
was deputy assessor of taxes under Frank Sehl and
Mr. Leeming, in the legislative buildings."
Mr. Nicholas' restlessness at ‘the movies' was
well known.
Once he took me to the Dominion. I remember
manager Robinson ushering us into a box. for Mr.
Nicholas was a very important person in this town.
I forget what the picture was, but, after about
15 minutes, Mr. Nicholas rose up. crashed into the
red velvet cord, tearing it from its hook, and took
his departure, without one word to me.
He did not return, but I contained my curiosity,
and stayed to the end.
Next morning he did not appear at The Times. 1
was very worreid by that time.
I made discreet enquiries, and was informed
that Mr. Nicholas had taken the midnight boat to
Vancouver, where he had a speaking engagement at
a luncheon at the University of British Columbia.
His hurried departure he never mentioned to
me. I can only assume that, of a sudden, about 9
p.m., sitting in the Dominion, he thought of his
engagement on the morrow.
So home he went, packed a bag. and caught the
midnight boat.
Naturally, I never mentioned tbe matter to
him.
1 would think that, by the time be was back in
> Victoria, he had forgotten all about it.
* * ★
Otto Nordllng, 130 W. Keith Road. North Van¬
couver, sends me a Seattle Times article, by
Stanton H. Patty, on Lulu Fairbanks, who, by the
pioneers of the North, was voted “Miss Alaska for
Ufe."
In mid-June a stone monument to Lulu's
memory was unveiled on the Seattle waterfront, in
a new mini-park called Alaska Square. .
Lulu Fairbanks never lived in Alaska or the
Yukon, but she was frequently there and often she
came to Victoria. ^
Like so many others who hdW been to “the land
of tbe midnight sun," once there, and you are sold.
You never forget it, and always want to go back.
Lulu Fairbanks lived most of her life in Seattle,
and there she died, at 80. in 1968.
Mr. Patty, in his article, quotes Miss Fair¬
banks’ wise advice; .
“Beiieve with alt that’s in you. and just keep
going." ' •
“ 'Have at least one good laugh a day — and do
a small, kind deed for another as soon as you can
after breakfast.
“-‘Keep on climbing mountains, climbing new
trails to wider horizons. I’m getting as old as the
hills, but I still dare to climb them.’ ’’
Next UnK I’m in Seattle, I must get to Pioneer
Square to see Lulu’s monument.
Two of my favorite speeches from out of the
past of British Columbia were made is Victoria, in
1858, by Governor James Douglas; in 1889 by Wil¬
liam Henry Seward, who, as U.S. Secretary of
State, presided over the U.S. purchase of Alaska
from Russia, for |7,OCO,(WO.
Addressing Cariboo-bound miners in Fort Vic¬
toria, Douglas said; “I am commanded by Our
Most Gracious Lady, tbe Queen, to say to the
citizens of that great republic, the United States of
America, which, like the mustard seed, has grown
up into a mighty tree, and gives shelter to the op¬
pressed of all nations, that off-shoot of England, of
which England Is still proud, — that we extend the
hand of fellowship to them.
“I am Instructed by the Queen to give you a
hearty welcome to Our country.
★ ★ ★
“I am commanded to say-to all Her Majesty's
native-born subjects that this is their country, and
that their country c^ens wide her portals to receive
them, from whatever part of the world they come,
and that they will enjoy here aO the rights,
privileges and Immunities of British subjects.
“Our Gracious Queen commands me to receive
you with kindness, and allow you to dig for gold in
her dominions, and to offer you the protection of
British laws, as long as you obey tbe laws, and pay
the Queen’s dues, like honest men.”
Seward was returning from Alaska when the
citizens of Victoria gave him a banquet, and. at the
head table was Douglas by now Sir James, and
retired.
Seward said;
“Having attained my existence through a long
line of Bri^ ancestors, including my father and
my mother. I am not likely, here or elsewhrae, to
disparage my lineage, or their race.
“On the other hand, I freely confess that it Is
my political ambiUon to see the United States of
America, of which I am a native-born citizen, trans¬
cend even the British nation, in-dvil and rdigious
liberty, and usefulness to the human race.
“I have never heard any person, on either side
of our common border, assert that British Colum¬
bia is not part of North America, or that its people
have, or can have, any Interest, moral or social, dif¬
ferent from the common interests of all American
nations.
“Into this broad field of activity and enterprise,
I take the liberty to Invite the people of British
Columbia to enter—as co-partners if they will, as
rivals if they must.” -r-
Douglas was quite impressed by Seward, and
wrote to his daughter, Jane (Mrs. Alexander Grant
Dallas) in Scotland;
“We had a visit from Mr. Seward—an event
which has caused something like a sensation here.
He is rather feeble in appearance, but intellectually
vigorous and active.
“His range of knowledge, grasp of mind and
powers of generalization are wonderful. He retains
whatever be hears or sees—so that bis conversation
is delightful, almost photographic in the precision
and point with which he can present details.
“We had some official correspondence—during
the Confederate war,, and he remembered,
gratefully, the efforts I made to restrain hostile
movements, and protect American trade in the
Pacific; a feeling so different, is it not, from that
exhibited by our own statesmen?
★ ★ ★ _
“As veterans in the public service. I suppose,
we quite took to each other. He gave me a warm in¬
vitation and said 1 was to be sure and call upon him
at Auburn, when I visit the United States.
“I fancy be must be travelling at the public ex¬
pense, as he does things In a right royal style, hav¬
ing a special steamer, the Active, chartered for the
trip, of about two months, an outlay that few
private incomes could afford.”
The Colonist greeted Seward as “the great
statesman whose patriotic record during the fe^ul
struggle of his country for existence has rendered
his name world famous.
“He Is now a nun who has turned the comer of
70 years. His figure is slight, and his face wears a
tired, careworn look.
“Tbe statesman’s eye, undlmmed by age. Is
singularly bright and exireasive, and a certain in-
deecrlbaUe gentleness of manners explains to a
great extent the wonderful meameslc influence
which he always exa-dses over those who approach
him.”
It'n great new* to hear that Agnet Newton Keith is writing
again. But, as much as / admire this remarkable lady, / hope she'll
forgive me when I say / can't quite believe two statements she made
tvhen we met for a delightful afternoon recently. “/ no longer have
that‘feeling that the whole world is waiting for my next book," was
one. The other, *'‘Vm really a very slow writer and quite lazy."
esv.
Maybe not the whole world is
wailing for your next book Agnes,
bul countless readers in many
countries undoubtably are . . .
and lazy? Who could call lazy the
creation of seven books, all best¬
sellers; even though they did span
.'16 years from the publication of
the first in I9S9 to the most re¬
cent. last September.
During that time Agnes Keith was not sitting at
home, waiting for inspiration to strike. She was tiv-
ing in countries such as Borneo. Libya and The
Philippines — and living as best she could through
the hell of being incarcerarted in prison camps in
Borneo by the Japanese for almost four vears dur
ing the Second World War..
She won’t tell just what her next book will be
By Betty Campbell
ahnin Just smiles, eyes twinklutf; and says: "When wmi
l>n out on a limb and tell people what you are doing diey
conbnually as*, 'How are you getbng on?' — Sometimes
you are not getting on at all!"
She has no idea when It will be finished either.
"They always take longer than I think, so I've stop-
pad saying wtiea 1 think It's really because I'm lazy
and I don't push myself. But I enjov writing, es¬
pecially when it's easy.' lOne thing about my
life, .it's been interesttng so it's been easy to write
about it. I'm slow, but when I get to a ceitain point
in writing a book I can't put it down — I'm waiting
for that to happen in this one .."
To say Agnes Newton Keith's life has been in¬
teresting in putting it mtidy. You could zoom in on
practically any part of her life and find chapters
covering everything from happiness to bizarre, hor¬
ror — and. eventually, happiness again. It sounds
like incredible fiction but her books are based on
her experiences around the world — non-fiction that
many people believe is better than fiction
As a writer and reporter Agnes shares Oak
Park. Illinois, as a birthplace along with Ernest
Hemingway and worked for a time for The San
Erancisco Examiner. She was leaving that office
one day when a man. crazed with dope and a beef he
imagined he had against that newspaper swung at
her with an iron bar. It seems he had vowed to kill
the first person he saw leaving the building and
.Agnes won the toss. Her skull was fractured and
resulted in quite a few serious ailments, both men¬
tal and physical, that lasted some years
In 19S4 she married Harry Keith, then conser¬
vator of forests and director of agriculture in
British North Borneo (now one of the Federated
States of Malaysia) and went to live in that country. '
Their Idyllic life-style there was related by Agnes in ,
her prize-winning book Land Below The Wind,
published in 1939. It tells, with earthy hunor. of
the glamor that was British Colonial life as well
as life in the jungle.
Then, in 1942. Borneo was overrun and the
Keiths were taken prisoner by the Japanese. Agnes
was placed In a prison camp with her infant son
Lieorge and Harry was in another. She says of this
time that their worst enemy was starvation —
which they almost died of — notwithstanding the
laet that both Agnes and Keith received serious
physical injuries at the hands of their raptors
•AGNES NEWTON KEITH . . . some of her books which were translated into many languages, fill the bookcase
behind her.
During the three-and-half years of captivity she
kept secret notes on scraps of paper. Some were
stuffed in George's toys and others hidden in cans
buried below their "living" quarters that she and
George shared with 264 women and 34 small
children.
There notes and details that will never he
erased from her mind went into the writing of
Three Came Home after the family was liberated
On their return to the family home in Oak Bay for
recuperation the Keiths were finally reunited with
their young daughter who had reifiained in Canada
at school at the time they left for Borneo in 1939
Three Came Heme was later made into a movie
with Hollywood star Claudette Colbert playing the
role of Agnes. When Agnes saw the movie: "It was
so realistic I could hardly stand it." But her great
sense of humor was evident as she noticed that
"Claudette's perm stayed in all the time she was
imprisoned' and lipstick never left her lips:"
One of her proudest possession today is a copy
of her book, signed by all who took part in the movie
with the words, "to salute you and yours as the
acknowledgement of the satisfaction they have ex¬
perienced in helping to record on film some of what
the Keith's endured so valiantly."
.Agnes was a«k«f to be a consultant dining the
making of the movie but she declined the offer. One
reason was that although she had spent her early
life in Hollywood, "when it was just orange and
lemon groves." she had "no desire to take on a job I
knew nothing about." Besides the Keiths had
returned to Borneo earlier as Harry was needed for
the rehabilitation of the country.
Although she was Invited to New York for the
film's opening she said she didn't think it was right
to get involved in anything that would make it seem
she was a heroine. "I only did what everyone else
did who was imprisoned — just Uved through it. If
they'd got me up on a stage in New York I’d have
tell a fool, knowing what servicemen and-women
went through and everyone else involved all over
the world."
The book and movie sales came at a time when
the Keiths really needed It — they had lost
everything due to the war, except the lovely home
in Ciak Bay that Harry had bought some years
before for his mother. During imprisonment Agnes'
Mother and Father had died in the U.S. and three
days after she was liberated ber brother died "It
was a complete obliteration of my family,” she
savs. "We had no choice but to pull ourselves
together and ga back to Borneo and make a Dving
again. I think that's the answer to most people's
problems: you do what you have to do.”
It wasn't easy going back. "The memories were
so terrible,” explains Agnes.” I felt I simply could
not go back. I couldn't let my husband go without
me." Bul once returned to Borneo she was glad and
found both Europeans and Asians "had this close
feeling and not the previous division of the two.”
In 1932 the Keiths left Borneo for three vears in
the Philippines where Harry worked with the U.N.
in helping to teach modem methods of tropical log¬
ging. From 1935 to 1964 they were in Libya, where
he was chief of the U.N. Food and Agricultural
Organixation'a mission. Both of these stays netted a
book for Agnes
Agnes pokes fun of herself when she says of the
movie Iktee Came Home: "People are alwavs dis¬
appointed I don't look like Claudette Colbert when
they meet me,” the same way she laughsof her ex¬
periences when her book Children of Allah was
published about 10 years ago. “I was invited to New
York for publication day and the publishers told me.
’ How wonderful, you've been asked to appear on the
Toda.v Show.' We'd been out of the country; didn’t
Continued on Page 5
Sunday, August 22, 1976
' The. Daily Calonist-r-PAOE 2
/
■w' ■
LEN COMPTON working on the wheel.
LEN COMPTON
The Travelled Potter
/
Pottery and ceramics are all
the thing nowadays. Some of it is
very, very good and some very
bad. Whichever the case, though,
it seems to be one of the most
popular forms of craft at the pre¬
sent time — whether done entire¬
ly for pleasure, or whether one is
trying to make a living at it.
One of the people who aim at making a living
from pottery is Lecxiard Compton, an Englishman
who has his kilns, wheels and the finished merchan¬
dise out behind Mattick’s Farm on the Cordova Bay
Road. <By the way, one mustn’t forget that Mat-
tick's is now known as Old McDonald Farm.)
Len Compton was born in Ewell, Surrey, and
grew up there, though he was evacuated to
Cornwall for the duration of the buzz-bomb era dur¬
ing the Second World War.
Some time after leaving school all English boys
had to serve their training in the armed forces, so
while waiting for call-up, Compton got a business
job in London for two years until he was called for
military service, during which time he served for
three years in the Royal Air Force.
From National. Service, Compton returned to
his job with Lever Bros, for six mcmths. However,
the wanderlust bug was beginning to bite him and
Sunday, August 22, 1976
PAGE 4—The Daily Colonist
he thought that a job as a service engineer which
would take him all over England might prove to be
the answer. Also, he had always been fond of
painting and all art forms, and he felt that by get¬
ting a chance to see and paint some of Elngland's
beauty spots, he mi^t succeed in working some of
the kinks out of his system.
However, it didn’t work out that way, and the
end result was that Cfunpton finally toi^off on a
hitchhiking, working tour of the world a tour
which was to last for three years from 1955 to 1958.
and which would take him from Mexico to New
Zealand, and many other points in between. Some of
those points were various parts of Canada where he
frankly admits he stopped to work to make a little
money.
By Margaret Williams
Having visited Mexico, he went to New Zeaiand
where he worked again. Incidentaliy. he feels that
he has travelled on just about every road in New
Zealand — a part of the world which he really liked.
Compton bought his passage home from New
Zealand, and then instead went on to Australia
where he visited ail the big cities to see whether
they bad anything new in the way of architecture.
However, be did not enjoy that part of the world so
much. He feels that Australia sees itself as another
U.S.A. at present and is therefore less pleasant than it
might be.
From Australia he moved on to the Philippines,
Hong Kong and Thailand, and his plan at this point
was definitely to journey to those points of the
world which had something wonderful, beautiful
and famous to show him. Thus he travelled to Nepal
to see Mount Everest, and to Delhi, and also to A^a
to see the Taj Mahal.
The Taj Mahal he found to be — as expected —
breathtaklngly beautiful. 1 also learned from him
that the actual tomb of the famous beauty is really
in the basement of the building. It is not only
beautifully ornate and colorful, but the accoustics
of the chamber in which it stands are so good, so
really perfect, that the man on guard sings to
visitors so that they may know and appreciate the
perfectness of sound within the building.
From India, Compton travelled on to Cairo,
hoping to see the pyramids, but was unable to do so
owing to restrictions in force at the time which
prevented British visitors from entering the area.
However, he did not hang about to repine but
moved on to Constantinople to see the Blue Mosque
of San Sofia which was built by the Turks — another
' must" on his joumeylngs since it is so beautiful.
When Len Compton got back to England he had
only about SO cents left to his name and had to hitch¬
hike the last part of the way to his home. He im¬
mediately got a job to stral^ten out his finances,
after which he attended a training course in Dudley
where he studied arts, crafts and geography.
He made up his mind to succeed and he certain¬
ly did as he ctunpleted the three-year course in two
years. This gave him the diplomas he required for
teaching sinc#he had two majors to offer. He really
wanted to teach arts and crafts only but in these
days it is usually necessary to be able to teach a se¬
cond subject which for him was geography.
He had married just before going to college and
his first teaching appointment after college was at
Chiseihurst Boy’s School in Kent which, he tells me,
is one of the few schools well equipped for pottery
A
TEAPOTS, CASSEROLES AND VASES plus a Cookie Jar show Compton's style.
needs. Len found, however, that he much enjoyed
worklnc with young adults, so he next took a job
with the Y.M.C.A. and in this work his job was as¬
sisting youngsters in transmission between school and
work. . -
Finally, In KIW Len and his wife Aiiette and their
children came to Canada. First to Vancouver and
then to a teaching job at Cranbrook. He later moved
to a ooinseling job with Manpower, but kept igi with his
pottery work, trying to run a pottery and art school on the
side. Ibis venture didn't work out too weD since the qiot
he chose to set up sh^ was the spot beside which thou^t
Woodward's were going to build. CMy they changed tbdr
minds and as a result he lost money on the d^!
^ Following this disappointment, the Comptons
moved to the Island where Len taught Indians at
Kohsilah, before moving on to do the same for the
boys at Shawnigan Lake Boy’s School. Finally, the
move was made to Victoria so that he could com¬
plete his full degree which would mean that he
could still return to school teaching if hip dreams of
setting up that pottery centre came to naught
However, having seen his work. I don't think it will
come to naught. He has too much to offer. Len feels
that to make a good living out of pottery a three-
man team is needed. However, at the present time
he is working on his own — though he already has
pupils, and some of the more advanced ones are
already allowed to try their hands at various jobs.
Len Compton's pottery training in England was
taken under Geoff Whiting, one of the finest potters
in present-day England who holds an Industrial
Designer Award for some of his handmade teapots.
Such an award is of great importance. Len tells me.
since it proves that a man can not only produce an
attractive piece of pottery but one which is func¬
tional as well.
Thus today Len tries in all bis work to combine
this same ideal combination of functional use plus
beauty of line. From the work I have seen, he cer¬
tainly seems to be succeeding in his plans. Indeed,
one of the sets I most admired on my visit was a
whole set of dinner-ware which included oven-to
table casseroles, soup bowls, plates and mugs, all of
a most pleasing design.
However, Compton tells me that one of the
most advanced countries both socially and in the
art-craft world at the present time is Denmark. He
should know, for at one time he attended a Danish
Folk School. He tells me, his brown eyes sparkling,
that It was ahibut 120 years ago that the Danish folk
high schools were originally farmed, and the idea of
them Is to educate people who have finished the nor¬
mal high school in further training in their own par- '
ticular fields — whetiwr it be drama, dressmaking, arts
or crafts c( all types — in particular, lis own field of pot¬
tery.
1 gather that the country itself supports the
arts, and he reminds me that Denmark has had
more nobel Prize winners per capita than any other
country.
There are many other countries, that are wbrld
renowned for their beautiful handmade pottery, and
one of these is Japan. We have been too prone in the
past to think of Japan in the terms of the cheap
over-colored and sh^y chinaware which made Its
way to western markets between the two world
wars. In any case, not too many of us are aware of
the really beautiful work put out by some of the old
Japanese hand potters — men who have worked at
this craft all their lives. There have been some in¬
teresting programmes on this subject on
television. While it would be hard to beat the
FINISHED POTTERY 10 mos. out of the kiln.
Greeks in terms of classic shapes, trained modern-
day potters are certainly proving that they have the
knor^ow needed. Bernard Leach who revitalized
craft pottery in En^and and elevated It to an art
form as against peasant pottery is said to be one
man who has linked the p^tery of the East and the
West. In his book. A Potter's Book, he has a great
deal to say about Japanese potters and pottery.
Since he studied for many years In Japan under one
of their foremost potters, he knows what he is talk¬
ing about. In bis book we find the statement that
"the first principal of pottery is utility and the
adornment of life with refinement. Not beauty for
beauty's sake, but beauty answering all the needs of
life.”
Having made a thorough tour of his store and
workshop area, it is plain to me that Compton sub-
scrib» to thte thmry too. for over and over again 1 found
pieces which were delightful in line and ootor. but which
were also of extreme practicality.'
He makes all his own glazes and at the present time
uses a large electiic kiln which be finds very relaible
Incidentally, he feels that a gas kiln or one us¬
ing wood or coal is actually better than the electric
one. and I think this has something to do with the
glaze finish of these products. However, the latter
^ methods are not very practical at the moment, and
certainly the work be is producing can bear com¬
parison with the best.
Soetsu Yanagi, the Intellectual leader of the
Japanese craft movement of today says: “To me
the greatest thing is to live beauty in our daily life
and to crowd every moment with things of beauty.
It Is then and only then that the art of the people as
a whole is endowed with its richest significance.
For its products are those made by a great many
craftsmen for the mass of the people, and the mo¬
ment this art declines the life of the nation is
removed far away from beauty." He goes on to say
that it is not enough that beauty should abide in only
a few articles Created by a few geniuses.
Well now. perhaps one would not go so Car as to
say that Leonard Compton is one of those few
geniuses. However, he is an artist in his own right
and the pottery work he is producing is certainly far
in advance of much other work I have seen around
I have a shrewd idea that once the craft-loving
public has found it way to his door off Old Mc¬
Donald's Farm. It will not be long before he will be
firmly on the way to success.
From Page 3
...We Are Waiting Agnes
have a television set. so I didn't realize that was the
stuff to do when you want to publicize a book so I
said if it helps I’ll do it."
She smiles: "I’d also heard that they made you
look quite beautiful in the makeup department, so I
thought that would be fine. ”
She turned up at five the next morning, but the
late Robert Kennedy was'already there, he was to
be on the same show. Says Agnes.
The make-up girls were all fluttering around
making that young man beautiful, so I didn't get a
lick of makeup from them!"
She was interviewed, thought it was easy and then
on returning to her hotel room where a friend was
watching was told: "Just as you vrere going to
speak they cut you off and put a bunch of commer¬
cials on!"
Her particular segment was never shown in
New York but it appeared in other cities.
Agnes says each of her bocks, according to her
publisher, has sold well enough to rank as best¬
sellers. Land Below the Wind went even further. It
won her |5,000 from the Atlantic iiugazlne and like
her subsequent books, was translated into many
languages. “But it completely bombed in Britain,”
laughs Agnes. "I’d had an advance on
there and I wound up owing them glO!”
Her last book was published last September,
Before the Blossoms Fall. It took her a year and a
half to write, which, says Agnes, “is pretty good
for me.” Like all of her works this is written hi a
refreshing and Individual style. Immensely
readable and interesting. (Agnes says her husband,
Harry, “is witty — and he’s never been a stuffed
shirt,” a compliment that applies to her also.)
Although she says this book, in which she wanted to
find out and present just what Japan and the
Japanese are really like, “was moetly intmwiews,"
it doesn't appear that way. '
You'd expect to find animosity in there
somewhere especially when you realize that the
Keiths had seen two Japan's. One with lovely,
courteous people during their honeymoon in that
country and one which showed opposite
characteristics during their imprisonment.
Of her latest visit Agnes says she still didn't
find out what the Japanese are really like — a p^
pie whom she loves, but cannot fully trust. It's a dis¬
cerning, compassionate account of her return to
Japan and the warmth she feels for Its people.
Vou'd wonder how anyone, with such ex¬
periences, could find room in her heart to feel —
and write — this way. But Agnes Newton Keith — a
lady of striking personality — does and has. The
same feeling comes through in Three Came Home
where she relates her experiences with Colonel Tat-
suji Suga, the commandant of the camp she was im¬
prison^ in.
Colonel ^ga killed himself when the camp was
liberated. After the book was published Agnes even¬
tually received a letter from Colonel Suga’s widow
thanking her for presenting the “just picture” of
her hu^nd. Agnes didn’t feel Colonel Suga was ■
monster, despite treatment she received.
For iitore than 10 years the Keiths have been
settled In Oak Bay and despite — or because of —
the experiences of the two, Agnes says: “We’ve en¬
joyed life a g)od deal, except for those few years."
Of Oak Bay and her comfortable book-lined home
Agnes says: “It’s beautiful; quiet — and I was
ready lor it.”
We are ready for it too Agnes — your next book
that is.
Sunday, August 22, Itlt
The Daily Cotonlsl-PAGE i
.0^
4
BURIED MILLIONS
In spile of the ancient
warning that “the love
of money is the root of
all eviP’, it is surprising
that some of us would
like to gel a bundle of
■ hat evil stuff in a hurry
and run the risk of the
consequences, which on
the surface, do not seem
all that bad.
"QaUe • mas.c saM the cap-
laia dltiaf aext to me." Teak aa
eipedlUaa la Cacae lilaBd, laok-
iB( far a Ireatare, bat hida’I ftad
aaythhif. Still waaU ta try agala.
Saaie sayi at mack at SM.Mt.M*
is Ireatare barled there. Bat
Victoriane of the poatibiliUet of the
venture and they formed the Pacific
Developfnent and Exploration Co.,
Lid., rather a faiicifiri title, and their
firat move was to huy the brigantine
Blakeley, which was US feet long and
bad a tonnage of I4S tons. They paid
" Moat of us have been victims of
H'hemea to get-rlch-quicfc, buying
Irish sweepstakes, or. a secret ven¬
ture in mining or buried treasure, but.
with our puritan consciences, have
always had a sneaking feeling that we
were not doing the right thing. For a
unrie it was associated with going to a
lorner store and buying something on
a Sunday, contrary to the Lord’s Day
Act. or. in participating in some
sports event on the Sabbath.
Then, along came the pale-faced
mayor of Montreal. Jean Drapeau.
who changed our thinking and made it
legal to do these things. True, the
Province of Quebec, had always been
a favored child of Confederation, and
done many things which we con¬
sidered wrong, for instance operating
Its theatres and sports arenas on
Sundays and ignoring the Conscription
orders when Canada was in trouble.
Drapeau had the bit in his teeth fol¬
lowing his success with Expo '67 and
plunged headlong into fulfillment of
his fantastic plan for holding the
Olympic Games in Montreai. In the
bark of his mind he had hopes that the
prosperous provinces of Canada
would bail him out and his ' under¬
privileged province.” If Dame For¬
tune deserted him. As a precaution.
Drapeau arranged for a nestegg in
rase of misfortune and had the laws of
the country changed so that be could
launch his Million-Dollar Sweep-
stakes.
This opened the doors for other
sweepstakes and the public rushed in
droves to buy tickets and. the once
rriticixed bingo games, were given a
halo.
It may nei be long before the
eld burled treasure game re¬
surfaces and this reminds me of
the days when Cocos bland was a
lemplatioa for any promofor who
bad a chart with ‘‘X" marks the
spot where the crown Jeweb of
Peru were burled.
In the days before the First World
War when I was a marine editor and
covered the waterfront. I mqie daily
calls at E B. Marvin <i Co., ship
chandlers on Wharf Street. In the
winter time it was a gathering pbce
for the sealing captains and other
waterfront characters, and was the
setting for s series of yams I wrote
under the caption "Around the Ship
Chandler's Stove”
One morning a new man joined the
circle around the huge pot-bellied
stove, its side red with beat and sizzl¬
ing. when some tdbacco-chewer
launched a stream on it He was in¬
troduced as Capt. Fred Hackett, who
brought the schooner Annie C. Moore
around Cape Horn from his homeland
in the maritimes and was enjoying
success with her sealing on the
Pacific, later taking command of the
schooner Libbie.
Sunday, August Zt, l*7C
PAGE t—The Daily Colonist
By Archie Wills
Kobody’s biting lUt time. Maybe
he’ll broach you. If he does, get
Mm to tell you about Ms first ex¬
pedition, really sometblag.**
Some days later Hackett sat next
to me around the stove and said he'd
like to see me about a plan be had. We
met and be produced a well-folded,
good-sized piece of paper, on wh)cfa
was scrawled the coastline of Cocos
Island. Prominent was a #eU-defined
cross which covered a good patch of
land on the island. Hackett exfrfained
how this document canw into his
hands.
*'ln lt35 the Peruvians were
alarmed over a threat of invasion by
the Spaniards.” he volunteered. "So
they placed their valuables, including
the crown Jewels, precious stones,
bars of silver and gold, on board the
Mary Deer, a Nova Scotia barque.
$3,800 for the vessel, which appeared
as a good buy» even though many such
vessels had passed their effec¬
tiveness.
Hackett wanted ta have a couple of
diviners who would pinpoint the
treasure spot and to the ftirprise of
many the court stenographer. Justin
Gilbert, whose hobby was making
violins, and D. M. Enyeart, of
Spokane, signed on for the Job.
Hackett had tested their prowess in ^
Beacon Hill Park by burying some
gold coins and telling th^ to find
them with their divining rods. They
came within three feet of the gold, but
no tests were held to locate silver.
H. H. Jones, president of the com¬
pany, announced, after watching the
tests: “These instruments are ex¬
pected to reveal the location ol the
treasure and then the ship's company
will dig for it.”
■ Victorians
Sought Fortune
. on. Cocos Island
which was anchored in Callao, then
slipped to sea under cover of night.
Mary Deer made for Cocos’lsland and
buried the treasure, where the cross
is <Ni the map.
“When the Mary Deer returned to
Callao without the treasure she was
seised and all men. including the cap-
lain, were arrested and charged with
piracy and executed. One man, named
Kejrton. escaped and eventually
returned to his native Cape Breton. As
be approached death he revealed bis
secret and gave the map to my father, -
who. as bis end neared, gave it to me.
And. there it is.”
“Understand you've made a trip to
Cocos and didn’t find anything,” 1
said.
“That's right, but didn't have the
ri^t equipment.” he replied. ”it
rains like bell there and need some
hydraulic gear and earth-moving
machinery and I’d sure like another
shot at searching for the pot of gold
there, cause 1 know it’s there. Mow'd
you like to help organize another ex-
pedition, you'd never regret It?”
“Sound interesting. Will have to
think It over. Hianks for the sug¬
gestion,” I replied.
1 dM not questlM HackeU's
sincerity nor hit desire far a
praperly-equipped expedltiaa,
bat I did waal la research Ms
firat ane. 1 had ta ga back la IMS
ta get the recard.
Hackett had convinced a group of
Outfitting of the tiiip continued and
minera who were drifting back from
unsuccessful quests for gold in the
Yukon, posted the company for
Jobs, but Hackett was careful in.
selecUng .bis crew. In addition to
Gilbert and Anyeart be signed Gus
Wbidden as mate and George Powell
as second mate. George Kirfcendaie.
who had been teaching school, went as
a deckhand and later became harbor¬
master of Victoria. George Forbes
signed on as sailmaker and was later
to get his master’s ticket and become
captain of several of the steamers in
the Princess fleet.
Hackett had no superstitious
fears and decided ou a total of 13
hands, hut, in the end, if one
helievea M the dire mysteries
thnrcan he built an 13. It may
have been a factor in the failure
tn flad the Ireasare.
Early on the morning of Jan. 7.
19(B, all hands piled aboard Blakeley
at a dock in„Vlctoria, selected their
bunks in the forecastle or after
cabins, and began a last minute check
of supplies, equipment, pumps, runn¬
ing gear and shook out the sails as
Hackett had not ordered a towboat to
get him out of the harbor. He would
rely on his well-established ability as
a seaman.
A large crowd gave the ship a rous¬
ing sendoff, wished all hands luck and
inwardly hoped they would And the
treasire, which would be good for
businesa in Victoria, then low-spirited
after the Klondike Rush petered out.
They knew piost of the men aboard
were on a share basis and a low wage,
but their expectations were high
Hackett made slow progress <m his
run down the coast and ran out of air
at times, the Blakely being “an idle
ship upon anitflesea.’’ At home Presi¬
dent Jones buoyed up the spirits of
those who had subscribed most of the
money for the trip, with choice pieces
of information contained in letters he
had received.
On Feb. 10 he called a meeting in
the old Board of Trade Building in
Bastion Square and read a letter from
Rear-Admiral Palliser, who had at
one time commanded HMS Warspite
when she was stationed at Esquimau.
Palliser offered to guide the expedi¬
tion for ooe-quarter of the treasure
and another one-twentieth for his ser¬
vice as a guide.
PsIHser saM he bad vMted
Ceces Island when !■ Warspite
and bad discevered the treasure,
but, being an n warship he envid
net teach h. Be dM, hewever.
blew np the entrance tn the cave,
senHng U fmm ether searchers.
Jones read another letter. It was
from a Mr. Glrous, of Chicago, a
director of the Chicago and Southern
Railway. Glrous said the value of the
treasure was about $60,000,000 and be
had received a confession from one of
two survivors of a ship which had hid¬
den the treasure and who had made
their way to the Sandwich Islands,
then San Francisco and on- to the
Great Lakes. He had a compass loca¬
tion of the treasure, detailed the land¬
marks and even had the number of
boxes which contained ft
News of Blakeley’s trip soon
gained international attention and
new leads came In about* where, wt^’
and what the Cocos treasure was
about. A member of the Van Bramer
expedition of 1889-70 wrote to say that
a San Francisco merchant bad ob¬
tained a transcript of evidefice taken
at the trial of officers of a BrHish ves¬
sel. which claimed to have buried the
treasure on Cocos.
According to this story, an English
warship in 1823 captured coin and bul¬
lion from ^nish ships and buried H
on Cocos. The crew wanted to divide
the loot between Uiems^es, but as
they had no war with Spain their ac¬
tion was considered piracy and
reported to the British government,
which sent a ship to arrest the men
When the trial was held In Ei^land
some of the men were executed and
others sent to a penal colony in
Australia, one of these escaped and
reached San Francisco, where he
related his story and, of course,
produced the necessary map with the
descriptive cross on it
This story was checked with
London and seemed authentic,
resulting in an expedition proceeding
to Cocon Island with the intMt of digg-
Mg up the treasure.
The black hand of desbt
lowered the spirits sf the Vlc-
terla hackers when aaether
repert oame hi freas AastraHa
whea a nMB reached there aad
said the treesare had heca faaad
IsIsBd M the TahitlaB groap.
Accorchng to this story the United
States schooner Black Witch was in
Callao when the Spaniards threatened
%o bombard tbe p^ and skipped out
with the treasure. While at anchor at
Cocos tbe crew of Black Witch
mutinied over the split ap of the
treasure and the only swwlvors were
the captain, named Smith, and a
BRIGANTINE BLAKELEY hauled out on Turpel's Ways, adjoining the site of
_ the present Pricess Mary Restaurant.
seaman. Smith reached Kingston,
Jamaica and outfitted a schooner with
the announcement that he intended to
do some pearl fishing. Instead, he
headed lor Cocos, located the
treasure and proceeded to the Tahitis,
where he buried it once more.
While the schooner was riding at
anchor it mysteriously caught fire
and the only member of the crew to
survive was the mate, a man named
Brown, who took kl,000,000 in loot and
reached Australia, where he went to
work in the gold mines. After a spell
he left for England where he lived
royally, telling people he made his
money in the mines. In time his
money ran out and he moved to
Providence, R.I., where he became a
broker.
These stories made lively chit-chat
in Victoria and many bets were made
on the simple statement: “Bet you
five dollars they don't get a dime out
of Cocos "
While this all helped to while away
the time in Victoria. Capt’. Hackett
was having problems aboard Blakeley.
He had expected to reach Cocos in 30
days but by the 100th day he hadn't
made a landfall and was concerned.
Next day he was overtaken by the
Norwegian ship, the Cingalese, and
checked his bearing, which showed
his chronometer was out three
degrees. On a corrected coutse he
picked up Cocos next day,and dropped
anchor in Chatham Bay. Spirits were
high aboard Blakeley and Hackett
was anxious to get ahead with his job.
Next day, April 19. a Saturday, all
hands were routed out early and the
job of moving to the island the donkey
engine, explosives, tents, food, digg¬
ing tools began. There was rejoicing
when the men once again had their
feet on dry land and escaped the con¬
tinual tossing of their boat. They also
found plenty of cool, fresh water and
drank their fill.
The party., though anxious to pur¬
sue the treasure, obeyed the biblical
exhortation and rested the next day.
the Sabbath. However, they did ex¬
plore the island and found wild pigs
darting about. It is said that Capt.
George Vancouver, when on his
voyage of discovery 1792, had cal¬
led there to take on fresh water and
left a few pigs that thrived on the suc¬
culent growth. Before long several
pigs fell before the hunters' rifles
and the meat proved tasty, resembl¬
ing venison.
The sea water was crystal clear
and the bottom was discernible in four
and five fathoms. The cliffs were ver¬
tical and several large caves were
found on the waterline. They were
dangerous only on a rising tide, when
their exits were blocked.
Bananas grew in abundance and
there were lemons and coconuts. The
men soon were to be almost driven
crazy by the little red ants which were
everywhere, into sleeping bags,
clothing and food. There were also
scorpions, eentipedes and mos¬
quitoes.
Next day Hackett cracked the whip
and the diviners, Gilbert, with his
whiplike magnet, and, Enyeart, with
his V-shaped witch-hazel mag¬
net. crisscrossed the island seek¬
ing the-treasure. They got reactions
and crews were ordered to dig. They
pushed tunnels into the cliffs and sunk
shafts. They used dynamite on
some spots but never a sign of gold,
silver or jewels.
Equatorial rains poure4»on to the
struggling men and the'seldom had
on a dry stitch. When they dug a shaft
down 10 feet it immediately filled
with rain water.
After 24 days of Incessant
work under dreadful conditiotts.
the men questioned the ability of .
the diviners, and secretly decided '
on a lest. They buried pockets of
silver and gold and suggested the ,
diviners work the area. The
diviners didn't come within 33
feet of the gold or M feel of the
silver.
Hacket noticed the spirits of his
men flagging and realized that he
needed heavy hydraulic machinery to
sluice away the banks and it was then
he got the idea of organizing another
expedition which would be equipped
for that purpose.
By this time the only man who
seemed to be enjoying the expedition
was Forbes, the sailmaker, who
stayed aboard Blakeley as a
watchman to check all running gear
and that the sails were in shape for
the return run to Victoria. He knew
the ship's stores were low and their
replacement was out of question. He
spent some time fishing and had
salted three barrels of several species
When Forbes went ashore he
always returned with stocks of
bananas and it was fortunate he had a
good supply when a storm of some
violence blew Blakeley out of the har¬
bor, despite the fact both her anchors
had been well embedded in the bot¬
tom.
It was 4.35 on the afternoon of May
11. when all hands had been sum¬
moned aboard from their toiling
ashore that Hackett, who was as dis¬
couraged as the rest of the men,
raised the question of halting the work
and heading back to VIctoHa andface
the music from their backers.
Their discussion was interrupted
by the roar of a southern hurricatte
which seemed to lift Blakeley out of
the water and blow her out of the bay
into the Pacific Ocean. The ship
weathered the violence, then Hackett
faced the decision as to whether to
return to the harbor anchor^ or set
a northerly course for Victoria.
'"I’m for going home'’,
volunteered Whidden. “We had 69
days of rain, which Is more than
Noah laced in the flood. There’s
im treasure hidden in the place
and If any other damn fool thinks
there is he's welcomed to It.”
To the surprise of the crew, as well
as Hackett. cheers erupted and it was
evident that everyone wanted to head
north.
“Well, that’s settled it. We'll put
about and take a last look at Cocos",
said Hackett. "Wo’re short on grub,
but Forbes says he has the ship full of
baiianas and several casks of fish.
We’ll catch some rain water when the
clouds to the north dump it on us.
We'll catch plenty of flsh on the way”.
“Stand by t' raise the jib and main¬
sail and Til lay out the course”, said
Hackett.
Hackett consulted his chart and
hoped to get home in at least 60 days
Cocos Island is only a few degrees
north of the equator and is in the
Blakeley’s hull had fouled up
with sea growth and her norther¬
ly progress was slowed. It took
her 17 days to reach Race Rocks.
It was Aug. 7 aad aews that sho
was headiag for Victoria harbor
was sigaalled to the Royal Navy
at Esqaimah, which passed the
word OB to tte newspapers.
By the time Blakeley had edged to
her dock a huge crowd had assembled
to learn of what success Hackett had
to report. The length of the men's
faces provided a ready answer. They
had found nothing.
The men jumped ashore and
refused to talk to anyone, except to
say they wanted to get a square meal
When suBicleatly refreshed they con¬
sidered their situation and it was
agreed they would sue for wages
“We got about half of what was
coming to us”, Forbes reported later.
The backers of the expedition were
disturbed over a rumor that Hackett
had not been to Cocos Island. It arose
from a letter from the Admiralty,
which said information had been
received from Capt. Ernest Fleet, of¬
ficer commanding the Esquimau
-based warship, HMS Phaeton, stating
that he put into Cocos Island on Aug.
4, 1902, and saw no recent signs of
habitation. He was aware of the
Hackett expedition and put in to see if
everything was all right.
Before long Victoria forgot about
the expedition and added to it the long
list of mjging ventures which it had
been part of.
Hackett however, continued his
hunt for another group which would
underwrite a second try to locate the
treasure. In this searoh he came
across me and was enthusiastic and
sincere about getting it, provided he
had the proper equipment.
Hackett returned to coastwise
shipping as a captain but always kept
an eye pealed for a prospect. As for
me I took Forbes’ convincing verdict
“No. I don’t think there's anything
there.”
Sunday, August 22, 1976
The Daily Colonisl-PAGE 7
J-ri-.Vp/ •'-. - ■*
Dress-Up Those
History tells us that people
have been enjoying salads for at
least four or five thousand years.^
Probably the first salads
(although salad is a more recent
term) were made of uncooked
tender leaves of various herbs
and green plants sprinkled only
with salt and called “sallets”.
from the latin word sal, meaning
salt. Our word “salad'' followed.
Lettuce is the most ccmmon of all salad greens.
The parents of the many varieties grown today
were doubtless the wild lettuce plants which
tlourished like weeds in the wastelands of southern
Europe and in Asia many ages ago. Persian kings
ate lettuce as long ago as 300 B.C. So did the Greeks
and the Arabs.
Jt was the Arabs who b^an developing dif¬
ferent varieties. About the beginning of the Chris¬
tian era lettuce found its way to the tables the
Homans. It wasn't until about the I3th century that
lettuce found its way to the northern European
countries and England.
It was probably Columbus who brought lettuce
seeds to the New World along with other garden
plants and seeds. With the discovery of vitamins in
vegetables and fruits many other ingredients were
added to the salad bowl.
Today salads may be made of almost
aaytMog that appeals to the appetite ...
besides fresh greeas we add aa almost
eadless aomber of other foods . . . Iroitt,
meat, fish, shell fish, pooltry, aals, cheese,
eggs oad every kiad of v^etablc. raw or
cooked.
But one thing all salads must have is a dressing.
ITte simplest of all dressings which followed the
early salt, is the cme made of dive oil. I^non juice
or vinegar and seasonings, sometintes called
Frenoh or Italian dressir^.
With salads oor subject for today we*U
start with two exeellent dressiags ...
CLASSIC FRENCH DREEING . . in a small
bowl combine one tsp. salt, one-eighth tap. dried
tarragon and one clove of garlic minced very fine.
Stir in one-and-a-quarter cups salad oil. one-quarter
cup tarragon vinegar, two Tbsp lemon juice and
one-quarter tsp. Tabasco. Mix well.
SOUR CREAM DRESSING in a small bowl
combine one cup sour cream, two Tbsp. lemon
juice, one Tbsp. vinegar, one-half tsp. each salt and
sugar, two l^sp catsup, one-quarter tsp. celery
seed and one-quarter tsp. Tabasco. Mix well, keep
refrigerated.
Tabasco is one of our most useful and nicest
spices. It is a wholly natural product made from sun
ripened peppers. Hcfced at the peak of their red
maturity they are mashed, aged and blended with
salt and vinegar for the piquant flavor known
around the world. For a unique and subtle flavor for
savories use a few drops of Tabasco.
Ckert Mlad Is the choice for all teatoa.
bs balanced mixtore offers aoarishment la
aN of its Ingredieatt . . . proieias ia the ham.
cbiclica or tarhey, Swiss cheese aad hard
cooked eggs. The fresh tomatoes aad greeas
are low la calories aad coatala vitamia A and
C.
CHEF'S SALAD . . . four cups torn salad
greens, one-quarter pound each Swiss Cheese,
cooked ham and cooked chicken (OR turkey) cut in
juUenoe strips, one tomato cut in wedges, four hard
cooked ^gs cut in quarters and a dozen pitted black
olives. Place salad greens in a large bowl. Arrange
strips of cheese, ham and chicken on top of greens.
Garnish with tomato wedges, eggs and olives. Serve
with Classic French dressing or Sour Cream Dress¬
ing. It’s nice to use a variety of salads greens for
flavor, color and texture. You could include a
choice of tender spinach leaves, along with a choice
of romaine. escarole. endive, iceberg or Bonton let¬
tuce.
Serve the salad with savory hot biscuits ...
give them an extra touch by dipping the tops in a
CU)
WH
pe;
ea«
Xof
the
Sei
tw.
of
tor
suj
fin
ma
pat
out
zw
hot
sal
pai
4
Salads
isoned mixture of melted butter, minced onion,
ited cheese and a touch of Tabasco.
A salad that It a little different cemet frem
«iy zucchini cookbook .. .
SUMMER SUPPER SALAD . . . one-quarter
p each mayonnaise and French dressing, six
eners cut in half inch slices, one-half cup cooked
one cup raw zucchini diced, one-quarter cup
;h chopped dill pickle and shredded carrot. Mix
;ether the mayonnaise and French dressing. Add
i rest of the ii^redients. Mix lightly. Chill well.
*ve on salad greens.
Tomatoes stuffed with zucchini makes a
lice accompaniment for cold cuts.
TOMATOES STUFFED WITH ZUCCHINI . . .
9 cups shredded zucchini (can be the firm flesh
a' very large one), one tsp. salt, four large
natoes, one*quarter tsp. salt, one-eighth tsp each
•ar and seasoned pepper, one garlic clove minced
e, one-half cup mushrooms chopped, four tsp.
yonnaise and one Tbsp. each vegetable oil and
^ley. Slice off top half inch of tomatoes, scoop
pulp and chop, put in coland^ with shredded
■chini and the tsp. of salt. Let drain for one-half
jr.
Sprinkle inside of tomato shells with mixture of
t, sugar and pepper. E>rain them upside down on
)er towels in frig for about a half hour. Now
ite the drained tomato and zucchini together with
Elides Ccrner
SALAD SUCCESS .
In general all greens must be young and crisp, clean, dry and Icy cold.
Like painting, creating a salad is truly an art. . . keep in mind these few simple rules . ., mix
colors, contrast of greens with vivid hues of fruit and vegetables. Blend flavors . .. tart with sweet,
sharp with mild and contrast textures.
For tq^ture and crunch use crisp croutons, blanched and toasted almonds, chopped walnuts,
sesame or poppy seeds, celery seeds, crisp crumbled bacon, Chinese water chestnuts or Chow Mein
noodles, fresh (not canned) bean sprouts.
Use a variety of greens . . . head and leaf lettuce, bib or butter lettuce, curly endive, Chinese
cabbage, watercress, tiny inside leaves of spinach, beet greens.
Salads are an investment in good health. Plan your meals around them.
1 ■
minutes. Turn up heat and stir constantly until all
the moisture has evaporated. Season to taste with
salt and pepper then cooi the mixUire. Stuff the
tomato shells and chill. To serve garnish with the
mayonnaise and chopped parsley. Place each stuf¬
fed tomato in a lettuce cup.
And let's not ferget the fmit salads.
To make an attractive fruit salad ... arrange a
combination ot fruit on crisp lettuce, watercress or
endive. For added interest, vary the shapes ... cut
some in halves, quartos, slices, crescents, cubes or
diamonds. Select fruits that offer contrast in color,
flavor and texture. For extra food value include
mounds of cottage cheese, cream cheese balls or
strips of Cheddar cheese. Qioose a dressing that Is
tart and creamy instead of oily.
Melded salads make a flM summer des¬
sert ...
JELLIED FRUIT SALAD . . . one package jel-
lo (lemon, orange or apple), one cap boiling water.
dash of salt, two Tbsp. lemon juice, three-quarters
cup cold water and fresh fruit. Dissolve jello in the
boiling water until crystals are completely dis¬
solved. Stir in lemon juice, cold water and salt.
Chill unit mixture begins to set. Fcdd in fruit and
turn into four cup mold or individual molds. CblH
until firm.
SUGGESTED FRUITS ... tbreeKfuarters cup
sliced pMhes and half cup each diced pears and
blueberries. Three-quarters cup diced apricots,
one-half cup each sliced plums and pears. Three-
quarters cup diced cantaloupe, half cup each diced
pears and seeded grapes.
Because of Increased interest in jam and jelly
making the Orto people have published a very
complete information kit with everything you
always wanted to know about this interesting sub¬
ject plus recipes for cooked and uncooked jams.
For your free copy write f^rpie Certo Information
Kit to Mrs. ^ndra To^er, General Foods
Kitchens. P.O. Box 4019. Terminal A Toronto. Onl.
M5W IJ6.
3(ala[a(a[a[a[a(sls HELP FOR HOMEMAKERS
GREEN THUMB DEPT.
DEAR HELOISE:
1 make terrific cachepots for
my plants by cutting the tup off
bleach bottles and decorating
the container with papier-
mache, glued-on fabric,
rickrack scraps or whatever.
By spending less on my
plant containers, I can inveat
more on my plants. Yippee!
Nancy J. Darke
TOOTHPICK TIP
DEAR HELOISE:
I saved an empty Z^unce
bottle of garlic powder and
bought a box of round topUi-
picks. The picks coiiie out of the
“shaker" perfectly, are kept
clean, and the bottle fits with ^
the other spice bottles on the
rack.
Sandra Peruzzini
LET’S FACE IT!
DEAR HELOISE:
Here's an oldie but goody ..
For quick and easy removal
of face powder on coUari and
i(a[a{a[a[a(a o KInc F.
dresa necks, juat rub with a
piece of soft, thick wool cloth.
Works better on polyester knits
and crepes than a brush, I
think, as it doesn't “scratch’’
the fabric.
. Frieda Evans
MONTH BY MONTH
DEAR HELOISE:
I have a solution for people
who have trouble keeping track
of their receipts. Get a paper
calendar that you can hang on
the wall or inside a closet door.
As you get your receipts for
the month, just staple them on
that month. When the month is
finished, just flip the page, and
^you are ready for the next
month.
At the end of the year, or
income tax tinie, you have all
your receipts right there — day,
month and year.
Mrs. G. Derrick
+ + +
That’s a great idea of how to
keep track for income tax
purposes.
I just hope now I can
remember to staple them to the
cakmriar instead of throwing
them into a tkawer.
Hdoiae
Thls^ featora is written foe
you.', the housewife and
homemaker. H you have a bint,
problem or auggeation you’d
like to share... write to Helofae
today in care of this newspaper.
'■■lurM I*, me., lOTU. Wopltf rtah te re»er<’> d .
rrS A SHOO-IN!
MY ADDRESS IS
DEAR HELOISE: DEAR HELOISE:
This hint is for baby-sitters Have you ever noticed how
and little girls who like to playip hard It is sometimes to find m
with the popular smaU costume address when you are driving in
dolls. 1 have found that small
children like to have a car for
their dolls. A shoe is the ideal
substitute!
All you have to do is put the
doll in a sitting position with her
legs straight out and slip her
into the shoe. Then just push —
and away she goes in her
“brand-new" ear!
P.N.
Age 11
-i- -i- -i-
How precious! When I was a
little girl, we used to use shoe
boxes for our paper dolls, but
never thought to use the shoe!
Aren’t you smart? Love you...
AuntHeloiae
LETTER OF THOUGHT
4 --
your car? Especially if there
are awnings on the house and
the numbers are located up by
the door!
WeU... 1 had my husband put
our house numbers on the front
of our top step. They can be
seen easily from the car. Since
we have ours, I have noticed so
many of our neighbors now
doing the same thing. They
must like my idea, too.
Faithful reader
-l--i--h
So do I...
Heloise
LAUNDRY DRILL
DEAR HELOISE;
Last week I bought four large
plastic wastebaskets and
drilled bolte down the sides and
lid. Then I painted tbe name of
a family member on each one
and placed ft tn tbeir closet. I
my husband and two
teenage tons that if their
lauMky wsent ki tbe con¬
tainers, it would not be waihed.
Now, no more dothei on the
floor, no more mixing up their
clotbei and no laundry
baskets...
I simply pick up the con¬
tainers, carry them to the
laundry and wben clean, fold
the clothes and place right back
into them. Then I return these
to eadi one’s room and let them
put their own clothes away. It
really works!
Irene
EASY AS ABC
DEAR HELOISE:
A used chest of drawers with
some of the drawer knobs or
drawer pulls missing may be
restored for a child’s room by
DEAR HELOISE:
... “We grow old too soon;
wise, too late’’...
8 Mrs. W. F. Faulkner
replacing knobs with alphabet
blocks. Vanuih the blocks with
clear shellac to prokMig the Bfe
of the paint
Mrs. Ben Henderson
USE YOUR SHADES
DEAR HELOISE:
I recently replaced some
white window ^uKtes. and the
upper parts of them were still in
good condition. Rather than
discard them, 1 lined my kitch¬
en cupboards. They look great
and wipe clean in a jiffy.
Mrs. Len Langston
ly, AsgMt n, lf7« The Dolly COloaist—PAGE 9
d
•J
Trials and Tribulations
It was a fine June afternoon,
good for seeing anything but an
office full of patients, when sud¬
denly my private phone started
ringing.
"Hi. Lyle, — want to come ow and see your
boat?"
Something in the tone of voice caught my ear,
the next day found good old "E.I.D.” — my favorite
Cessna, — winging me Pitt Meadow way
★ ★ *
I couldn't believe it. Mr Pilgrim stood proudly,
an artful blend of teak and steel, — finished and
launching-ready, down to the last lick of paint. Red.
I mean Are red, and pure white cabin top and sides
made a nice combination.
Already, the boys had given the aA cabin its
nickname, "the Or^ Room.” — commodious for
the boat's size, cosy, and complete with head and
hanging locker.
Launching Day was something else. Eased into
the Fraser River from her special boat trailer by
adept professionals, she hugged her mooring
against the relentless, plucking current, during
mast-stepping and rigging.
★ ★ tk
Christening could have been a fiasco, but instead
provided a bit of comic relief, as we were all a bit
up-tIght, holding our breath as the boat slid gently
Into his element.
Would you believe it took lour good hefty
swin^ to break a bottle of champagne i^ainst a steel hui-
I? Believe it or not. the dam bottle kept bouncii^ off'
Tv
Then downstream under power, the Yanmar
Diesel 2S horse auxiliary as smooth as velvet,
thanks in no small part to Cliff Friesen, marine
agent for Vancouver's Me. and Me., who co¬
operated enthusiastically with F^r Sallcraft dur¬
ing the engine's installation.
Everything seemed to be going smoothly,
thanks to Jake Fehr's care in informing all the
swing bridges well beforehand, until g newlybullt con¬
crete affair hove in sight.
Would our 41-loot aluminum mast under pass?
Anxiously, one forward, and one astern, we visually
measured the angle made by the mast top with the
bridge deck, as Mr Pilgrim swept closer and
closer, bridgeward.
Suddenly, it was obvious. No way did we have
room. Then, quickly, it was full reverse, lull power,
and that amazing engine-prop combination stopped
us on a dime, before, backing up like a New York
taxi. Talk about manoeuvrability!
★ ★ fk
Eventually, without midiw. we tied into our
designated berth at Hyatt Marina. The following
week, just about one year to the day of Mr.
Pilgrim's conception, we had the pleasure of
welcoming hundreds of guests aboard.
While it was fun sfxndng off Mr. Pll^lm, it was
tiring withal, and we were very glad not to be trying
to clean shag carpeting, when it was all over.
A good night's rest, and Mr. Pilgrim was ready
to go home to Victoria. Ready, that is, except for
the fact that our compass, a Astral Moore, hadn't
yet arrived from England.
Goertz and Co., in Vancouver were doing their
best to expedite In any possible way its speedy ar¬
rival. but in the meantime we had to make do.
We got under way with two small compasses,
one in the cockpit, and after a time, one handheld in
the spreaders, to check deviation error, which
turned out, by the way, to be a good 1$ degrees, on
the course we wanted.
Ignorance is sure, bliss! we dIdn'J seem to have
a worry in the world, until a large black lonely buoy
hove in sight, that didn't make sense on our chart.
Heading due south, as we thought, we should have
been seeing the familiar B.C. ferries plying back
and forth, but not a one came in sight.
★ ★ ★
A bit perturbed, we called up a passing fishboat
* on OUT VHF radio, enquiring our course to Active
Pass. His course and directions headed us back
northwest, until unfamiliar landmarks prompted us
to ball the stlU-flsbliv occupants of a rowboat, with
the expected reply: "What’s the matter with you
guys? Haven't you got a diart?
Suddenly the light dawned — we were in Porlier
Pass, would you believe It? Hanging a sharp left
down Trincomall Channel, we passed Prevost
Island, hung a sharp right, and were home free.
Then the real work started for me. Hiere were
an sorts of pumps, valves, wins, seacocks, etc.,
to know all about, but sailing, getting to know the
boat, and its sail power, under all conditions. All
kinds of things, it developed would need modifying
or changing, as our experience grew.
Problems always come during this early post¬
natal period in a boat’s life, and Mr. Pilgrim cer¬
tainly had teething troubles!
As one friend succinctly put it:
★ ★ fk
"All I saw of you for three months, was your
behind, sticking out of the engine room!
We learned, and confirmed, what we had
suspected, that marine electronics can be a real
disaster area, and were very bappy, that wherever
DR. ROBERTS GETS FEEL OF HIS BOAT AT Boat Show.
P.AGE in-rThe Daily Colonist Sunday, August 2t, 197C
LAUNCHING DAY.
a
I
ISLANDER
Crossword Puzzle
fxsalle, we had elected lor manual (i))eratton of
winchw, bilge pumps, etc.
The radio direction finder was scrapped, as H
seemed to me to present an insoiuUr fSoMem. at
least for me. in a steel boat.
Ralph Hi^as. of Sundowner IV, was a dam
good guide, plmosopher, and friend in the making of
ttiese decisions, and took a friendy. personal to-
lerest in the boat and our fitting-out.
Edited by Margaret Farrar
l-eM Xngtdt* Thu
Penchuit
Audience
Aristocreciefi
Thorny
beauty
69 Bibbcal pee'
tore! tribee*'
men
62 Puteqiiee-
tkm
€8 Stiimiletee
64 European
blackbird
66 Mythical
Greek matri-
67 Overiiead
14 Appointed
ae agent
16 TimMver
16 Young
ACB086
1 Elect
6 Cigar boa
wood
10 Diffident
16 CUff
19 Sector
20 American
chamdeon
21 Pinnieh lake
22 Transient
28 Skein
24 Land of
ancient Sar-
CapM char¬
acter
ManifesU-
tions of grief
Capital of
Weetem
Samoa
Hriirear
December
••-ah Ye
Faithfur*
Zola
17 Skilled
18 Loud guffaw
28 Stadium
echo
30 Dep.’s oppo¬
site
31 »-M
to bed’*
34 Reiect
36 Oriental
dvat
37 Anciaot
Italian of
Campania
3g Not-<iB
no way)
39 Waif
41 Relative
value
42 Sabbatical
We decided to rely primarily on sextent.
chronometer, log, and radio time signals, ae our
prime navigational aid.
(?amoeun College's ni^tt school course in
deepsea navigation, taught by Rod Darby, proved to
be just the ticket for our needs, proceeding from a
basic explanation, underlying all modern
navigational methods, to the practical use of the so-
called “Quick’' tables, axb ae H O 214, and l»w
newer 2^.
84 Claeeified
itesne
86 German
name for a
Polieh city
87 Freeh etarte
90 EnroU
90 Partook of
humble pie
68 Hunalayen
72 Give a false
alarm
76 Cgswork
uhits
77 Made an
uipearance
82 (^utivate
88 Short drap-
25 Diapooeof
26 Mexican
rooking pot
27 ScotinsMital
favorite
29 LaftBaidi
36 Exploaive
36 Highway
^tton
Pilgrim's
Progress
modwlse
Coneklar
without
enthuaiaMn:
Phraae
Large kettle
Greek god*
deee
Qevar
echene
The Champ
Land dealws
Having
made a will
Odds and
ends
Historic
French river
41 Copper coin
45 '’Spiunante*
city
46 Qty on the
Meuse
48 Toward the
center
50 Roman’s
wife
64 Came forth
56 Clairvoyant
66 Deeignrr of
168 Above, in
Germany
100 Game of
chukkcrs
110 Extra
111 Sites: Lot.
113 Voided
escutcheon
114 TaB Japan*
see tree
116 Taetee
110 Strong
antipathy
120 Cassowary
Falls power
system
00 Mine output
61 Jogs along
64 Element, Au
No. 80
66 Vandenburg
AFB site
69 BoU
70 Pacific
tubers
Dr. Lyle Roberts of Victoria
had a dream wUcb be is makiag
come true. Along with his son and
daughter-in-law, Richard aad
Sandy, of Victoria, Dave Bar¬
rington of Vanconver, and Marty
Taylor of Victoria, be has set off
OB a one-year cruise to the South
Pacific in his 36-foot dream-cutter
Mr. Pilgrim. _'
Dr. Roberts tells the story in a
series of Islander articles . .
from the start of his dream, to
periodic accoanfs of their
journey.
97 Dutch E.
Egyptian
By now. it was time to g«t extra patches on the
sails, where they were beginning to show wear
marks, as there were the areas that would really
take a beefing on a kmg crutae.
Soft, supple leather, to reinforce areas on the
boat that might chafe, proved extremely hard to
find. As a matter of fact. I visited fifteen shops,
before finally wheedling some!
Baggywriiikle bad to be made and installed on
the aft shrouds, and spreader ends covered with
sheepskin, to protect the jibs from nnnecessary
wear and tear.
By this time, believe It or not, April was coming
up. and we suddenly realized that take-off time was
not far away. Panic almost raised its ugly bead.
Here we were fiddling around, and we hadn't even
had himaelf out of the chuck for a good scrub!
So. after a series of unfortunate and rather
frustrating delays, we were able to have a good look
at his bottom, inducting the lender area, where we
had pranged a rock getting out of Oak Bay one dis¬
mal day.
Alan Dicllinson. up at Van Isle Marina, was in¬
strumental in helping us here, and we had her up
finally, bottom and freeboard painted, and back
down again, in 36 hours.
Boy! Was I stiff for the next two weeks!
However, the Mggest problem of all, or at least
the Mggest potential problem of all, namely, the
boat's crew, really solved itself.
WMk an thia was gofeig on, I had been turning
over in my mind just who might be suitable, and
whom the boat might suit, considering the fact that
we were planning a year's absence, and preferred
not to add or subtract crew, once we bad set out.
1 happened to meHion the troUem to my son one
day. and was redier astouided at Us rep^:
"Well, it's about time you mentioned H. I
thought you'd never ask!
"Do you really mean that, Rick?"
"Of course I do. And that goes for the wife,
loo."
Sandy, smiled her agreement. From that dme
on. I knew we were in, like FTynn.
Later, Dave Baragoo of Vancouver, heard
about the boat, via the usual grafievlne, and came
over to have a look at what was happening.
We like bbn, he seems able to tolerate the
Roberts crowd, so we are all looking forward to a
happy trip, and a happy boat. *
Sunday, August 22, IKS
The Daily CotoiHsl-PAGE II
By Dr. Lyle Roberts
DOORWAY TO HAPPINESS
On Friday, June 23 of this
year, Victoria's Camosun College
completed a novel, unusual and
innovative course aimed at
creasing the students’ knowledge
of, and interest in, outdoors and
country living.
Hie course started In October, 1S7S. It was
listed as yie log house construction course.
There has been a great resurgence during the
past months. In the minds of our population, of all
ages, concerning environment and problems of
habitat. It is not surprising then, to learn that the
age span of the students taking part in the course,
ranged from 18 to 77 years.
The course was held at Camosun College
' Technical and Vocational Institute, a modern, sub¬
stantial complex of buildings set in attractive sur¬
roundings in the countryside some two miles along
the Interurban Road from where it intersects with
Wilkinson Road.
The log house construction course was not a
dry, lecture filled, class room sort of thing. It was
an open-air adventure in practicality. No books or
note pads were needed; Just a fading fw nature, a
physical aptitude and a wish to achieve success in
the art of acconvUshing one of life’s earliest ambi¬
tions, that of building a home from the trees of the
forest. •
Sunday, August 8 , 1878
PAGE U-The Daily CokHiist
My first view of the course’s activity came as I
turned in, topped a slight hili and looked down into a
saucer-shaped open space centred by the gleaming,
rugged looking walls of an almost nnished struc¬
ture. This was the 1,300 square foot, peeled log
house, the practi^ result of on^ie^ teacidt^.
advice and direction from master log builder, Ken
Chavtor.
By
George
Inglis
From an unfinished doorway, a figure appeared
and strode towards me. He was a young, big and
tall, lean type of man. His long yellow hair was tied
in a pony tidl behind his neck. A thick red beard
framed his chin and brightened the blue of his
steady, direct eyes. His Hue denims were faded,
fringed and* clean. He looked and walked like a
woodsman.
He also reminded me faintly of a long past Vik¬
ing sea rover. 1 soon learned be was anything but.
’This was my introduction to Ken Chaytor, the
man in charge of the Camosun log course.
He laughed easily when I told him of my first
impression fantasy. “No!, No,” he said. I am a fifth
generation Canadian, bom in the Cowichan Lake
area. Honeymoon Bay, to be exact. I am English
descent as far back as 1486. Although,” be added,
mischievously, “there might have been a bit of Vik¬
ing blood cr^ in about that time.”
Conversation was a little difficult and often
chopped off by the sudden whining of the power
saws as they bit deep into the fir logs. ’The power
saws and the chump-crack of shaping axes were the
only noises heard. No sound of hammer heads strik¬
ing spikes, for no nails woe used during the com¬
plete construction of the log house.
When I visited the construction site, the stu¬
dents were working on the third log house erected
during the life of the course.
Hie basic plan of the log house construction
course was designed to teach a student, who wanted
to become a commercial log bouse builder, so that
.he could go on to make it his way of earning a living.
None of the students had had any previous ex¬
perience in log house building, although some of
the apphcaiks lad experience in caipmhy. “Hiat
Is no help at aD,” expUned Ken Chaytor. ‘log
building is totally different to carpentry. In logs, a
person works mostly with his eye. He lun to be
able to look at a log and know just where it would fit
best. ’Hien, he must shape It with his axe, to lie
snug.”
There is no doubt about the thoroughness of
Camosun’s log building course. Each student
learned every step It takes to process the log along
from its arrival at tbe site in Its nahaal state and
shape until it finds itself in its appointed place in the
new log house.
Contlaaed on Page II
r
;
«
«
A STRIKING STORY — By Dorothy Abraham
, Peter, believe it or not, is our
Grandfather Clock — at times
somewhat tiresome. I'd like to
tell you his‘story.
Clocks are the most fascinating things, clacks
of all kinds; big clocks, Uttle clocks, city clocks,
church clacks, perpetual motion, self-winding;
some with a tidal registry, all kinds and sizes from
the noisy wretch that proudly declares to those who
work that It is time to get up, to the great and
famous Strasburg clock, with its four tiers and tur¬
rets, and a spiral staircase up to Its various gal¬
leries with mechanical devices. f •
At Wells Cathedral In England is an attractive
clock, where at 11:30 a:m. crowds will be seen lin¬
ing up Inside the Cathedral to wait the noon-day per¬
formance. At the striking of the hours, a company
of mounted men, armed with lances, conduct a
mimic tourney upon a platform over a dial, and a
seated figure in knee breaches kicks a bell at each
quarter, the quarter being sounded by two knights
in 10th Century armor with battle-axes.
Outside this cathedral are seen the famous
swans, which every day ring the bell for their after¬
noon tea.
Outside this cathedral are seen the famous
swans, which every day ring the bell for their after¬
noon tea.
Then, of course, there aie the London clocks,
the most famous and well known is Big Ben. known
the whole world over, which has stood for centuries,
its face a welcome sight to everyone visiting
London.
We remember the first time Big Ben was heard
over the radio. How we waited almost
overwhelmed with joy and home-sickness. It stands
365 feet overlooking London.
It used to take two men five hours to wind Big
Ben. this now is done by-electricity. Big Ben Is the
The beginning of the operation is the bark peel¬
ing of each log. This is the student's first lesson.
Iben. he learns by eye and practice how to pick a
log out. Ihere is really only one place for a log to
go. to fit properly in a log bouse. It is the student's
job to find that place. It takes a keen and practised
eye to look over a pile of logs and choose the right
one to suit a certain niche.
The log building course was a joint affair.
Camosun College put It on. Ken Chaytor steered it
through to a successful conclusion.
In the beginning. Ken wrote a lot of letters, try¬
ing to interest educational authorities in his log
house construction Ideas. Camosun College was the
only one to show Interest. It agreed to sponsor the
course, and pay Ken Chaytor to instruct the student
log builders, if he would provide, and pay for, the
logs.
The logs in each finished house would be
Chaytor's at the completion of each section of the
course.
It cost almost 14,000 for Ken Chaytor to
purchase his supply of rough logs, delivered at
Camosun's Technical and Vocational Institute. He
needed a big pile to supply the needs of the course
which ran from October, of lOIb to June. 1876. Three
log houses were built during that period.
At the ccnchision of each section of the course.
Ken was allowed to sell the finished log house and
recover part of his original $4,000 investment.
He had no trouble In finding buyers for his
houses.
Ken Chaytor arrived at his present occupation
by a devious route. He left school at age 13. Then, as
he put it. he entered the school of life. He travelled
around a lot, worked a while, lived among other
wandering people, saved a bit of money, visited
California, stayed for a time wUth a large group of
young people living in a big run-down house — com¬
mune style. "I saw lots of extreme poverty," said
Ken. "but we all definitely believed that things
could be better. I, myself, was looking for some
way to make a living at what I would likd doing, and
be happy at it.” ^
Finally. Ken retraced his steps to Canada, and
Vancouver Islapd. By this time, he was 20 years old.
and married to a Toronto girl he had met in his
wanderings. He is now 23. with two children.
. Ken Chaytor started in the log house building
craft, three years ago after be met, and worked for.
grandfather of all clocks, and the story of its casting
and recasting is most interesting. What vicissitudes
it has passed through, witnessing many pageants
and tragedies.
H. V. Morton in his book on London gives a
gra^ic description of his visit Inside Big Ben,
whose chimes cry out; "All through this hour. Lord
be my Guide, and by Thy power, no foot shall
slide."
So Big Ben defiantly points the finger of time,
and time is hastening on. If chronology Is correct,
we are now nearly at the end of this dispensation,
and looking forward to the New Day in which all
crooked paths will be made straight.
Back to Peter. Whgn we bought our house on
Faithful Street in 18^. w^sald: “We must have a
clock for the corner of the hall, a grandfather clock.
."For a time I haunted the auction rooms, but
with no result. One day to my great delight. In The
Daily Colonist appear^ an advertlsment: "Grand¬
father Clock for sale.” ,
I jumped on my bicycle right away and bought
it (t didn't bring it back on my bike, though I have
been known to bring a chair home from an auction,
and on one occasion with a friend who bought a big
wheelbarrow at an auction, we wheeled it merrily
through town and over the Causeway, much to the
amusement of spectators. I wonder if Ruth
remembers!)
The clock was installed with great ceremony,
and we named it Peter. He was quite an ordinary
clock made by Pepper of Riggleswade, with no
'frills such as the superior astronomical dock of a
neighbor, but he suited us with his manly sonorous
voice, although many people prefer chimes.
We loved Peter and he became a great compa¬
nion, especially to my husband at night, who does
not sleep as sdundly as I do. (I don't think Big Ben
would wake me). The constant tlck-tock was like
the murmur of the sea. with his joyful voice keeping
company.
\ Some people dislike clocks striking at night.
a fellow who had contracted to build some small log
houses in the Parksville area.
Developing a liking for logs and log building.
Ken went up to the west Kootenays. built his first
commercial log house, and sold it. He then moved
up to Prince George and took an intensive four
months course in log building at the College of New
Caledonia. He studied, read and learned a great
deal about logs.
Ken's next move found him in charge of a sum¬
mer log building project in the Bowron Lakes parks
system, by Barkerville. He built patrol shelters for
skiers.
With a germ of an idea activating his mind. Ken
sat down and wrote many letters to schools and col¬
leges such as Camosun, Nanaimo and Selkirk Col¬
lege at Castlegar, trying to promote interest and
action in developing a log house building course. He knew,
from his trandoings. that the time was ripe to pudi for a
back-tonature project.
His letter to Camosun College came to the at¬
tention, and held the interest of Alan Batey, direc¬
tor of community services. The result was that
Camosun and Chaytor got together on a successful
log house building course. During its term, 80 stu¬
dents of different ages and from many walks of life,
learned the art and craftsman skills of fitting log on
log to build a house.
The log building course was divided into three
separate periods during which three houses were
built. The first coarse was a pilot to see how the stu¬
dents reacted. It tasted for six weekends. There
were 18 students. They build a smallish log cabin. 18
feet X 24 feet. This was sold immediately to an up-
Island resident.
The second period lasted eight weeks, and a
more ambitious one-and-a-half-storey log house
was erected.
The third and final log house of the course, just
completed, will be dismantled, all logs numbered
on the ends, loaded and trucked to a waiting
purchaser up at Mill Bay.
"What type of men signed up for this course?” I
asked Ken Chaytor, "And where did they come
from?”
' “Oh! all manner of men,” he replied with a
laugh, “and from all over.”
> "One was a young lawyer who gave up his law
career to go in for log building. He wanted a more
satisfying and pleasant way of life. Two chaps
even the City Hall clock used to be stopped at 9 p.th.
so that peo^e could sleep. I wonder if this is still
done?
There are many people who tell us that when
they love and. talk or sing to their plants, it has an
effect upon their growth, and I read only the other
day that scientists are Finding this out. Would you
believe thgt a clock would respond in the same
way? I. do.
Peter on occasions would go on a galloping
spree, or sometimes turn sulky, and be all behind;
so I would scold him, or coax him. saying: “Peter,
darling, you really must behave better, because if
you don't you will find yourself in Lund's auction
room, and you won't like that.” Peter would listen
and go merrily on with no more trouble. But one
day after:
"Forty years without slumbering, "Hck-
tock,” "Hck-lack”
Life’s seconds numbering, “Tlck-tock”, "ITck-
tock”—”
Peter, stopped short with a little squeak like a
cat. and shut up, not another sound. Neither
scolding nor coaxing had the slightest effect. The
house seemed impty. The nights silent and lonely.
Off came Peter's head (his head piece), and I.
who know nothing about clacks, except that they
tell the time, etc., armed with duster, oil. and
weapons, peered into his innards; removed the dust
of ages, cleaned his teeth, oiled his guts, washed
his face and hands, and behold. Peter began striking
again, and going along at a steady pace; but alas he
had another sick spell, stopping at five minutes to
every hour.
A friend suggested that we get a clock
specialist, and In town we called at his shop, only to
find a notice: “Tuesdays and Thursdays." and this
was Wednesday! We were desolate, but after a lit¬
tle more manoeuvring, and a good deal of coaxing,
Peter smiled and went off gaily to the next 40 years
at his usual pace, and the house resounds to his
striking.
Happiness
working here now. have got B.A. degrees. They are
turning their backs on whatever they got their
degrees for. and are settling for a life in nature.
Two easterners came all the way from New
Brunswick to take the course. They have four or
five orders for log houses waiting for them on their
return.
"Then we have a well-known Victoria car
diologist.” Ken continued, “who is having a log
house built for himself. He justed wanted to take
the course to be able to understand the way It would
be done.
"We have one old lad of 77 who took the course
for the pure enjoyment of log construction.
"How did your pupils know about the course?”
I asked.
"Mostly by word of mouth.” Ken replied. “It
really wasn’t well advertised or we would have had
a lot more applicanis. You see. log house construc¬
tion is getting naxe popular day by day. People
txing it up in conversation. I had this one chap from
Rocky Mouitain House, in Alberta, for the sole purpose of
taking the course and then returning home to build his
own log house. He had overheard someone talking about it
in a supermarket.
"All I do here.” he said, with easy modesty, “is
to train the boys to be competeiit in the art of
building with logs.”
Ken Qiaytor is completely sold on log house
construction. He thinks the type of log house he
builds would stay good for 100 years. Probably
iTxife. "Living in one, to me, as like living in a sanc¬
tuary. a natural pleasant environment.” he ex¬
plained.
Now that the log house crmstruction course Is
successfully over, Ken ChayUr Is moving up to
Parksville to open his own business, the Vancouver
Island School of Log Construction.
His long range hope is that log building will join
the normal academic subject in high schools, and
that credits will be given for it like in history or
gwgr^ihy subjects. FM^kig teacheis could enroll at his
school, take tests and. if tli^ pass, could get credits as
luU-thTie log bukSing teachers.
It would appear that Ken Chaytor has hitched
his wagon to a rising star. At any rate, he has
travelled a long way, and learned a lot, on the
Street of Life, since leaving school at 15.
Sunday, August 22, 1976
The Daily Coleaist—PAGE 13
From Page 12 • • • Doorway to
I
To say the ieast. the EUiza Ander^n of 1897 was
a far cry from the trim, respectable lady of 40 years
before when, upon her arrival on Puget Sound in
1859. the 275 ton. 144'toot*long sidewheeler had en¬
joyed instant popularity on the Olvmpia-Victoria
mail run
.Also serving Steilacoom. Seattle. Port Town¬
send and way ports, the .Anderson, typical walking
beam sidewheeler of the day. set no speed records.
In tact, it has been said ot h^ that no other vessel in
Pacific ( oast history was slower than the Eliza
Anderson or made money Caster.
P'or the Anderson was a trooper: steady and as
reliahte as a dollar watch For almost 40 years.*
she sened between Puget Sound and BC. ports.
But. finally, a depressed economy and old age con¬
spired against her and she was at last tied up by her
latest owners, the Northwestern Steamship Com¬
pany. ^ her berth on the Duwamish River, the ag¬
ing steamboat waited patiently for the inevitable
voyage to a scrapyard As ft turned out. fate
By T. W. Paterson
heW nxire in store for the faithful Anderson than
an upumininis end at the hands of shlpbreakers
Instead, three years later, the stdewheeler was to
put to sea one last time . . to sail on a voyage
which would make west coast maritime history —
and baffle mariners for more than half a century'
Karly in August, IW7. the Anderson sailed
n»rthward for St Mictiaei under the command ot
( aptain Tom Powers, and in company of as strange
a cavalcade of vessels as ever distressed an un¬
derwriter. The Anderson proceeded under her own
steam, as did the lug Richard Holvoke lanother
Pacific Northwest pioneer, being one of the first
deepsea propeller-driven tugs built on Puget Sound,
some a) years beforei. and the lOe-fool stemwheeler
W K Merwin Under two of the Holyoke was the
oM Russian gunboat. Potilofsky. which was to serve
this missnalched flotUla as fuH barge, and the little
schooner William J. Bryant, with its four pas¬
sengers. as stores ship
I FOR THE KLONDIKE . restored to service for one last fling, the old sidewheeler Eliza Anderson sailed
northward to keep a dale with a "phantom pilot "
* *
Crowded aboard the Anderson was a itioUey col¬
lection of adventurers and characters, ranging
« om the notable to the notorious, tinhorn gamblers
rubbing shoulders with the respectable and the
religious. Harmony between passengers and crew,
it seems, was lacking in the extreme, arguments
and worse belpg the order of the dav as this seago¬
ing circus limped northward through the Inside
Passage beteen Vancouver Island and the British
Culumbia mainland
Making Capt. Powers' task of keeping the
Anderson afloat and on course all the more difficult
Sunday, August a, lt7(
PACE It—The Dailv Colonist
was the tact that the steamer's list of appofnbnenLs
did not include such luxuries as a compass. Further
problems arose at Coraox. V I.. when the old
steamer collided with the sailing ship Glory of the
Seas: fortunately for that vessel, confining most of
the damage to tier own starboard paddle box
Somehow, the Anderson. Holyoke. Politofsky.
Merwin and Bryant lumbered on. defying the
elemags and all commcm sense as they slowly made
their wav northward
Howard, once off Kodiak Island, matters became
increasingly seriois as a sloim ravaged die fleet,
hnally slapping the Merwln's towline. Amazingly,
the good tug Holyoke managed to restore this vital
hawser, althou^ not without considerable dif¬
ficulty. Then the Anderson did her part to enliven
the occasiai by nning out of oaal-pracisely at the
peak of the storm.
From the start, those who had paid for their
passage aboard the Anderson had known discomfort
and dissatisfaction. Tempers had flared from the
moment the eager fortune hunters piled aboard and
chargBd to Itiar reserved cabin and berths—only
to (ind that the ship’s ownerkfwho knew a gold mine
without ever having set foot in the fabled Klondike
— had sold the staterooms and bunks two. and often
three, times
Under the circumstances. It had been first
come, first served — or the toughest — in settling
accommodation. For those who arrived late, or
were unwilling to resolve the matter by duel,
fistiscuffs or cards, and unable to find room in the
ship's saloon, it was the hard, open deck — and a
long, unpleasant voyage to Alaska.
'Ditn^ became decUdy more inhappy when,
caught In the gate north of Prince Rupert, the
weary Anderson began to toss and turn crazily, as
Capt. Powers and crew fought to keep tier head into
the wind. This navigational necessity was made all
the more difficult when her chief engineer reported
the steamer to be out of coal, and unable to refuel
her bunkers from the Politofsky as planned. Capt
Powers had no choice but to order his men and pas¬
sengers to ravage the vessel for firewood
in the next few hours, every piece of flammable
furniture and fitting that could be spared was chop¬
ped up and sacrificed to the great god. steam. Many
of those of the sidewheeler's company not so
emplo.ved. turned to even more pressing matters,
such as prayer, the Rev. Mr. Clark of New
Hampshire saving a growing number of souls as the
hours advanced—and as the Andersixis chances of
advanced the shrm seemed to diminish
As proof of their reclamation, several of the
ships gsmbtlng fraternity ditched cards and dice. For Ns
part . Capt Powers made aacrifloes of his own. inslnirtiiig
his crew to pmr almost SO banels of lubricating oil and
kerosene over the how in an attengit to calm the waves
.Almost as great a threat to the Anderson's ter¬
rified company as the gale, was the condition of the
steamer herself. For the twice-retired side wheeler
had been neglected for far loo long
During her first mothballing, years before, she
had been abandoned, half-suhmerged. in a muddy
slough , much of her oiginal equipment being strip¬
ped bs' scavengers as kneetugh weeds grew fixxii
her decks.
* ♦ ★
Partially restored, she had re-entered service
before again being laid up and. ultimately, refitted
tor the run to Alaska. But repairs had b^ purely
makeshift — anything mshave costs — and how she
passed, steamboat inspection, even in that carefree
age. defies reason. Likely, some of the money
v^ich should have been spent on repairs had bees
used to ease her through Inspection.
Grim proof of the Anderson's condition came
when her tall smokestack crashed to the deck,
creating even greater headaches for a beseiged,
Capt Powers and his officers
Interestingly enough, however, the steamer's
Continued on Page IS
e T*
Put To Sea One Last Time
...and made maritime history
CoDlinued from page 14
crew (quite likely a woe-begotten assortment of
waterfront derelicts and inexperienced adventurers
working,their way to the gold fields) seems to have
performed reasonably well under the circum¬
stances. The fact that their lives depended upon
their keeping the Anderson afloat and underway un¬
doubtedly inspired all, passengers included, to duty.
All were kept busy, the seamen working to set
out a sea anchor, repair the rudder chains (so
rusted that they broke not once, but several times),
ciean the steam pumps, which continually clogged
with coal dust from the flooded bunkers, and pour
oil on the charging waves from the bow. Passengers
did their bit by taking turns at the pumps, as, below
decks, firemen continued to axe furniture and cargo
for fuel.
For two days and two nights, the exhausted
Anderson struggled against the storm, kept afloat
by a fervent combination of patchwork and prayer.
By this time, as It became ever more apparent that
the sidewheeler must eventually yield before the
overwhelming onslaught of wind and wave, the
energetic Mr. (^ark was able to take grim satisfac¬
tion in the fact that his work of spreading the Word
throughout the ship had been abnost universaily
successful. The most backward of sinners among
her company had seen the light and willingly for¬
saken evil ways; the conversions likely prompted
by the fact that the Anderson was rapidly running
out of fuel, the firemen having been forced to the
extreme of draining the steamer's wooden water
tanks and chopping them up for fuel, the cook hav¬
ing contribute the last side of bacon from the gal¬
ley.
★ ★ ★ *
By the third morning, the end was fast ap¬
proaching for the EHiza Anderson. Not only was she
rapidly running out of fuel, and fast taking on
water, but heroic Capt. Powers had lost all track of
his position. For all be knew, the sidewheeler could
be on a collision course with some submerged rock
... he just did not know.
Exactly what happened at this point Is a matter
of some dispute, today, more than three-quarters of
a century after. According to one account, the
Anderson's salvation came in the form of a small
sailboat which, defying the rollicking seas, steadily
overtook the laboring steamer. Upon coming
alongside, the craft's lone eeenpant, “a veritable
giant of a man, rawboned and muscular,”
clambered over the side and onto the Anderson's
deck, to make his way, without a word, to the
pilothouse, where an exhausted and anxious Capt.
Powers and officers were yet at their posts. With
his long grey hair and beard, and looking as though
he had stepped from the pages of the Old Testa¬
ment, the stranger took a position beside the
helmsman. Then, throughout that memorable
night, he gave terse instructions as he felt neces¬
sary.
Unerringly, be guided the Anderson past reef
and islet until, at long last, the storm was almost
spent and the steamer safely anchored in the snhg
of a tiny island cove. When the Anderson was
secured alongside the dock of an abandoned can¬
nery, the silent stranger climbedlnto his boat and
sailed away without a word of explanation as to his
identity or as to how he had come to spot the
steamer's predicament.
According to this source, the identity of the
"phantom pilot" was never learned. His ap¬
pearance at the height of the storm, and his sudden
departure when the ship' was safe, assumed, over
the years, an uncanny quality which pade nwre
than one of the Anderson's passengers and crew
wonder If they had not imagined the entire Incident.
Whatever, the Eliza Anderson and company
were safe, and having refuelled from the old can¬
nery's coal pile, they Umped on to Unalaska. where
the passengers showed their feelings for the
Anderson by immediately abandoning her; continu¬
ing on to the mouth of the Yukon by sealing
schooner. And there, far from her home waters of
Puget Sound, Eliza Anderson awaited her fate for
the third, and final, time. This time, there was no
reprieve and. a year after her miraculous arrival, a
storm parted her mooring lines and she drove
ashore. Before long, she had been reduced to little
more than a memory, her bones scattered on the
beach.
As for the other illustrious vessels which had
accompanied her during that epic northern voyage,
only two, the tug Holyoke and the schooner Bryant,
liv^ to see Washington waters again. After two
seasons on the Yukon River, the Merwin was taken
to Nome, where she went ashore and was gradually
pounded apart. The old Politofsky, return^ to her
,home waters of Russian America, also died at
Nome.
★ ★ ★
But if the Eliga Anderson was gone, the
mysterious circumstances surrounding her “phan¬
tom pilot” and providential escape from certain
destruction continued to haunt students of marine
lore for years afterward. Another version of that in¬
credible last boyage is to the effect that the
stranger had not overtaken the Anderson by small
boat, but had suddenly appeared at Capt. Powers'
side in the steamer's pilothouse, to guide her
through a maze of breakers and reefs to a safe har¬
bor. Described as having a beard, the eerie
In the course of the Corwin's search, the
crewman had questioned two brothers at Kodiak
Island. Operators of a small cannery which had
failed, the Scandinavians told him how one of the
brothers, upon seeing the Anderson at Kodiak, as
she prepaid to sail for Unalaska, had boarded her
as a stowaway, intending to see a relative in
Unalaska about a loan.
Even when the Anderson had been beset by
storm and lack of fuel, he had remained hidden,
sure that she would weather through the gale, and
afraid that if he revealed himself he would be held
for the authorities upon landing. However, when It
became painfully evident that the steamer must
founder before long, he had introduced himself to
Capt. Powers, and guided that officer to a safe
anchorage near the cannery.
Once the Anderson was secure, his brother had
taken him off the sidewheeler by rowboat, both
hiding in their isolated cabin until the steamer
sailed. This Scandinavian cannery operator — at
least, according to this version — was the
"phaiiom pilot'' who so mysteriously appeared at the
height of the stonn and guiM the Andoson to safety.
Whichever he was — stowaway or ghost — the
mystery pilot undoubtedly saved the Eliza
Anderson and her exhausted company from cer¬
tain destruction. And with that, the remarkable
story of a remarkable ship was history.
How Fish Get Their Names
Do you know of a fisherman anywhere who has
ever caught a bachelor perch? Or how about a
hogchoker, a 'Tennessee snubnosed darter, or a
barndoor skate? All of these are fish commonly
found In North American waters, yet few anglers
have ever heard of them.
The job of Identifying all the different fish
species in the world Is almost beyond comprehen¬
sion. It Is estimated that there are more than 18,000
species of fish known to science. Just to find and
name all the members of the darter family is a
tremendous undertaking.
★ ♦ ★
Darters are small fish, often used as bait,
which are seen in almost every, stream In the
United States and Canada. A check of current
literature shows there are nearly 100 known species
of darters. Some are named after their location,
others after their color, or a distinctive physical
feature.
No one really knows how some fish are named.
With many species, the names seem to fit their
habitat, favorite food, coloration, or other feature
of the body. Catfish, for example, gained their
name because of chin barbels which resemble a
cat's face whiskers. But the bachelor perch, really
a little-known name for white crappie. Is a puzzler
because crappie definitely aren't bachelors when
it comes to fi^ populations.
* ★ ★ “
The barndoor skate probaUy obtained its name
because it is ohe of the largest of the skates,
reaching a length of nearly six feet. Someone, years
ago, most likely conunented that It was as big aka
"bam door,” and the name has stuck around ever
since.
The other oddly named fish mentioned earlier,
the hogchoker, certainly doesn't go aroimd choking
hogs. It's also known as the American sole, and Is
caught primarily by commercial fishermen. One
can only guess that the flatness of the fish's body
caused someone to once remark that It would
"choke a bog” If it were to be swallowed. Tbe true
origin of its name remains a mystery, as is tbe case
with so many unusual fish names.
ANSWER TO LAST
WEEK’S PUZZLE
vwn
Sunday, August Zt, 1(78
The Daily Celonlst-PAGE II
TRANSPORTATION. THR 01.D AND THE NEW. Yukon River expedition members watch as a seaplane prepares for takeoff nearby
^ ^sYukon River—By Raft
Four men set off on an ex¬
pedition last spring whieh not
many today would think of tackl¬
ing, but an amazing .lO to 40
thousand men and women did
just the same trip at the turn of
the century.
The four have set about ren^reating the old
Klondike gold rush route for a National Geographic
film for one specific personal reason
As one expedition member, Paul Crews
put it: “We want to show people that Alaska
isn't really what you see in the picture books — that
it's really a bitch."
llie film vrill include travel by foot, water and
dog sled and will encompass all four seasons in re*
tracing the steps ot those adventurous “argonauts "
who came North to seek their fortunes in the gold
fields of the Klondike.
The only difference with this trip is that these
four men have much more experience in the art of
boat building and wilderness survival than did most
of those southern "diediakes" who came before
them, knowing little or nothing of the rigors they
would have to encounter.
The trip began at Dyea. Alaska, the start of the
famous Chilkoot trail, which winds its way through
the coastal mountain range and into British Colum¬
bia at Bennett, B.C., the water journey begins and
will carry the men through the Yukon and eventual¬
ly land them bade in oentrarAlaska.
Once the foot Journey over the Chilkoot was
complete, the men set about fasbkming a raft which
would be their home for the next four nuMiths. Their
raft, however, had to be built with a little more
technical expertiae ttum those of an earlier day in
order to get them ttirough modern-day obstacles
such as bridges, river locks and past the hydro
electric dam at Whitehorse.
Built to exact proporti o ns, the crew were able
to easily slip throu^ the one l^idge and lock at the
Swodav, August 22, 1976
PAGE l^The Dafly Celsnist ^
Fl.OAT LOGS had to be removed before raft was
lifted from lake
By Andy Hume
head of the Yukon River, but the dam presented a
much bigger and more complicated problem
With the aid of a crane sturdy enough to haul
their three and a half ton craft out of the water at
Whitehorse and a Oat deck truck to evry it around
the dam. that leg of the journey was completed, but
not without a near disaster.
On the first try. the raft proved to be not (|uite
strong enough to bear the weight on its centre
beams and very nearly split in half, but with some
quick thinking and re-locating of cables, the task
was carried out without incident.
And so the journey continues. The next major
step wfll be to increase the size of the raft From a
present 19 by 25 feet to an eventual 25 by 50 feet.
The reason for this is two-fold. The men need ade¬
quate storage space for a year's supply of food and
they need enough lumber to construct a 20 by 20 foot
cabin for their winter lay-over.
The raft will be pulled ashore in the fall and the
men will then construct a cabin to see them through
until the winter snows set in enough to continue the
trek by dog sled.
Weather permitting, the team will set off with
26 dogs and three or four toboggans around
November, for-the last 500-mile leg of the journey
Once they reach the coast again, the bush will to
left behind and they win make the return trip ^
plane.
This type of adventure is not new to these men.
having done the same trip two years ago for a
magazine article, the only difference then was that
the overland winter portion of the expedition was
completed on cross-country skis, but this time they
say they want to re-create the old gold rush route
authentically step 1^ step.
It's the cr«w’s fifth time on the Yukon River
and they now have 14,000 miles of river rafting ex¬
perience between them, they have also built 10 rafts
similar to this over the past few years.
The film, which is scheduled for release in the
fallof 1977,sb(Mld prove to be a highly entertaining,
educational and enlightening look at.what some of
the old pioneers and prospectors, who formed the
foundation of iwtfaem exploration and develop¬
ment, went thfwgh on their rigorous trek to and
through northern B.C.. Yukon and Alaska
V.